AAP: NT:Ranger clean-up ignores traditional owners
        Publish Date:
        12th December 2013      
  By Neda Vanovac
  
  Aboriginal traditional owners have been left off a taskforce convened by the government to investigate a massive leak of uranium and acid at the Ranger mine in Kakadu National Park.
  
  At 1am on Saturday a leach tank with a capacity of about 1.5 million litres collapsed, spilling out a
  
  mixture of uranium, sulphuric acid, and mud at the mine site, which has operated for 30 years inside the
  
  boundaries of one of Australia's largest protected areas.
  
  The federal government suspended operations at the mine and has formed a taskforce with regulators
  
  and the mine operators to respond to the incident, but traditional owners have not been invited to
  
  participate, says David Vadiveloo, acting CEO of the Gundjeihmi Aboriginal Corporation (GAC), which
  
  advocates on the behalf of the Mirarr people.
  
  He told AAP the lack of an invitation to play a role "goes to the heart of our calls for the desperate need
  
  for independent oversight of that mine".
  
  "The regulatory procedures are just as archaic as the mine," he said.
  
  "We're calling for a change in the way the business is run - in fact, we're demanding it, because there
  
  cannot be ongoing operations in that area that ignore the rightful participation and input of the traditional
  
  owners."
  
  He said the Mirarr people are frustrated and tired with the lack of scrutiny of the mine's operations.
  
  There have been more than 200 incidents and breaches at Ranger since it began operating, with three in
  
  the last month alone.
  
  "Traditional owners have done everything they possibly can to talk to the miner to improve relations, yet
  
  this is how they get treated when an accident of this magnitude occurs on their land," Mr Vadiveloo said.
  
  Mine operator Energy Resources of Australia (ERA) allowed regulators and GAC to inspect the site on
  
  Thursday, and has released a community information sheet advising that the slurry has been completely
  
  contained on site, with no impact on the surrounding environment.
  
  But an on-site GAC representative says radiation testing is still being carried out, with a large volume of
  
  contaminated material sitting on the ground outside the contaminated area.
  
  Mr Vadiveloo said he was "stunned" to see ERA reassuring the community before testing was complete.
  
  "Through good fortune - clearly not good planning - it hasn't rained here since the accident, but what
  
  would ERA have done had the skies opened up and a huge dump of rain come in?"
  
  Traditional owners did not feel safe on their own land, he said.
  
  "Frankly, we are not reassured by anything they're saying at the moment, and we're certainly not
  
  reassured by testing results and data feedback from their officers and the officers of government
  
  regulators."
  
  GAC is calling for a fully independent review of the leak, along with a full audit of operations at Ranger.