'Seriously fails': Pat Dodson slams WA cultural heritage legislation

The Labor statesman has condemned the heritage destruction that has already taken place, saying the new legislation will allow for more.

Labor Senator Pat Dodson at a press conference at Parliament House in Canberra.

Labor Senator Pat Dodson has slammed the WA Government's new cultural heritage legislation. Source: AAP

Labor senator Dodson has said Western Australia's new heritage protection legislation will allow for more disasters like Juukan Gorge, and declared such destruction "cultural genocide".

"You are wiping out the evidentiary base that indicates the occupation and the use of these lands by the First Peoples of this country in a systematic manner and this law will continue to allow that," he told NITV News. 

The legislation has drawn condemnation from Traditional Owners, academics and Native Title bodies, who have raised concerns about its effectiveness in protecting cultural heritage.
Juukan Gorge
The 46,000-year-old caves were destroyed by mining giant Rio Tinto in May 2020, sparking the reform of legislation. Source: PKKP AND ABORIGINAL CORPORATION
"It continues to enable those companies that have been approved with a section 18 to exercise those rights that they've had under that law, which means they can destroy sites with impunity.

"A lot of our heritage has been systematically destroyed and that to me is tantamount to a form of cultural genocide," he said.

by the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination following a complaint from Traditional Owners in Western Australia.

"The Draft Bill allegedly fails to respect, protect and fulfil the right to culture of Aboriginal people who strongly oppose it, due to the serious risk it poses to their cultural heritage," said a letter from the committee's vice chair Marc Bossuyt.

"(The Bill) will maintain the structural racism of the cultural heritage legal and policy scheme, which has already led to the destruction of Aboriginal cultural heritage in Western Australia."
The 46,000-year-old caves were destroyed by mining giant Rio Tinto in May 2020, distressing the traditional owners, the Puutu Kunti Kurrama and Pinikura (PKKP) people. (AAP Image/Supplied by PKKP and PKKP Aboriginal Corporation) NO ARCHIVING, EDITORIAL US
A screenshot of a supplied video taken in 2015 shows the Juukan Gorge rock shelters in Western Australia. Source: PKKP AND PKKP ABORIGINAL CORPORATION
In a statement to NITV News a spokespersons for the Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment said "protection of Aboriginal cultural heritage in Western Australia is primarily the responsibility of the Western Australian Government" and that the federal government "has commenced a national engagement process on the modernisation of Indigenous heritage protection regimes".

Senator Dodson said it has taken too long for the government to get to this stage, and First Nations people are being failed in the meantime.

"They've continued to delay reforms of the national cultural heritage protection law," he said.

"It's nearly two years now since this has occurred and they've done nothing except in the last week of parliament enter into an agreement with First Nations groups to begin a review about the cultural heritage protection laws."

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3 min read
Published 16 December 2021 6:40pm
By Keira Jenkins
Source: NITV News


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