Mining giant Rio Tinto should pay compensation to traditional owners for destroying the sacred Juukan Gorge caves in Western Australia, a parliamentary inquiry has recommended.
Earlier this year, the company blasted the 46,000-year-old rock shelters in Western Australia's Pilbara region, despite warnings of the site's cultural significance.
Labor senator Pat Dodson, member of the joint parliamentary committee looking into the issue, said the destruction of the caves was one of the worst avoidable disasters "that has ever happened in our country".
"Ancient 46,000-year-old caves of human occupation destroyed, so there is a case to be made for reparations by Rio Tinto," he said.
The inquiry was established to investigate everything from Rio Tinto's corporate behaviour, the adequacy of state and Commonwealth heritage laws and harm caused to traditional owners.
It made seven recommendations in an interim report released today that called for actions from Rio Tinto, the West Australian government, the Commonwealth and all other mining companies.
"The [traditional owners] faced a perfect storm, with no support or protection from anywhere," the report said.
"They were let down by Rio Tinto, the Western Australian Government, the Australian Government, their own lawyers [and] Native Title law."
The inquiry recommended Rio Tinto work with traditional owners to reconstruct the ancient structure, especially an adjoining water system.
It also called for a moratorium of all mining in the area, as well as recommending the company review its internal procedures in managing Indigenous heritage matters.
Rio Tinto's role 'inexcusable'
Published by the Joint Standing Committee of Northern Australia, the report was titled Never Again.
"Never again can we allow the destruction, the devastation and the vandalism of cultural sites as has occurred with the Juukan Gorge - never again!" it reads.
"The blast devastated a place of personal, community, national and international significance.
"Rio Tinto's role in this tragedy is inexcusable.
"Rio knew the value of what they were destroying but blew it up anyway."
The Puutu Kunti Kurrama and Pinikura people (PKKP) told their side of the story to the inquiry describing the "immeasurable cultural and spiritual loss" felt from the blast.
Their submission also described the incident as a "shocking act of corporate vandalism to our very sacred site".
PKKP told the inquiry there was a major power imbalance when negotiating with mining companies.
Rio Tinto should remove legal gag clauses that stop landowners from speaking publicly about their deals and negotiations, the report recommended.
This report is the latest in the months-long fallout from the blasting, already the company has felt public and shareholder backlash.
The company has already issued a public apology and three senior Rio Tinto executives have stood down due to the incident.
The company is expected to release a statement about the interim report later today.
Legislation 'woefully out of date'
The destruction of the caves by Rio Tinto was technically legal, as the company received permission to conduct the blasts in 2013 under Section 18 of the WA Aboriginal Heritage Act.
The inquiry is investigating the adequacy of state and Commonwealth heritage protection laws and the way they interact.
"The Western Australian legislation that enabled the destruction of Juukan Gorge is woefully out of date and poorly administered. Everyone accepts this," the report said.
"We are suggesting they seriously look at these Section 18 notices, which enables a company to just do what they wish," Dodson said.
"It's a license to destroy sites."
The WA Government is currently reviewing these laws, which were written decades before Native Title was introduced.
The final report is expected to be handed down next year and will further examine the legal regimes in all states and territories, as well as making calls for sweeping reforms.
"The destruction of Juukan Gorge also highlighted the shortcomings of federal law," the report said.
"Ironically, Native Title has become another means to destroy Indigenous heritage."
None of the committee's findings are legally binding, and it will be at the discretion of governments and companies to respond accordingly.
- ABC