* Mine thy neighbour * * The Australian government needs to control
Australian miners in Indonesia *
* Jeff Atkinson*



A large proportion of foreign mining companies in Indonesia are Australian.
They may be generating badly needed funds for the country, but the cost to
those living near these mines has been very high.
Indonesia is rich in mineral resources. It desperately needs the income that
exploiting these resources can bring. In 1998 the mining industry
contributed some US$ 9,573 million to the Indonesian economy, and US$ 570
million to government revenue. Minerals and related products accounted for
19 percent of total Indonesian export revenue, and generated over US$ 3,000
million in export revenue.

*But who benefits most from this, and who has to bear the cost? Under the
Suharto government, and still today, local communities living around the
mine have borne the heaviest burden. *

Communities already on the poverty line lose the land, the source of their
livelihood, to the mine, usually without sufficient compensation to allow
them to maintain an adequate income. Others have lost valuable income from
small-scale and artisanal mining when the authorities declare it illegal in
the company's concession area.* Rivers on which they depend have become
unusable because of pollution; the fish disappear and the river water causes
rashes and itchiness when people try to bathe in it. Those who object to any
of this feel the heavy hand of the police Mobile Brigade. *

*At the Indo Muro mine in Central Kalimantan, operated by Perth-based Aurora
Gold Ltd, the problem was the loss of land by indigenous Dayak people, and
the loss of income from small-scale and artisanal mining. At the Barisan
mine in South Sumatra, owned by another Perth-based company, the complaint
is pollution of the rivers by run-off from the mine.
*
*At Rio Tinto's Kelian gold mine in the upper reaches of the Mahakam River
in East Kalimantan there have been human rights abuses. In July 2000 the
Indonesian Human Rights Commission released a report that, among other
things, highlighted sexual abuses against local women and female employees
at the mine. Some of the victims were under-age and the majority of these,
according to the report, are alleged to be the victims of an Australian who
was the mine manager at the time. *

I*t is of course not just Australian companies that are causing problems.
The operations of PT Freeport Indonesia in West Papua, majority-owned by
US-based Freeport MacMoRan, have become notorious for their massive
environmental damage from riverine waste dumping and gross human rights
violations against local groups who resist. *
All of these operations were established under the Suharto regime, when
negotiating access to land with local landowners was not necessary and
companies left community relations to the government and the Mobile Brigade.
Now with Suharto and his political apparatus largely gone, many of these
companies are paying the price of appalling community relations and unjust
treatment from which they benefited. Local communities have become much more
demanding and aggressive, and many operators have seen their mines over-run
by large numbers of illegal miners.

*Voluntary code *

What has been the response of the mining industry in Australia to all this?
It is well aware that the problems are not confined to Indonesia, and that
Australian mining companies have been engaged in sub-standard practices in
many countries. In Papua New Guinea for example, it was revealed in 1999
that the environmental impact of the Ok Tedi mine, 52 percent owned by BHP,
was far worse than had been expected, and that none of the possible
solutions that had been investigated were feasible. Most notorious of all
was the massive cyanide spill early in 2000 at the Australian-owned
Esmerelda mine in Romania, which had a cataclysmic effect on fisheries in
nearby Hungarian rivers.

There is certainly a realisation within the industry that they need to 'lift
their act', that community expectations in the home country and the demands
of communities in the host country are such that this kind of performance is
no longer acceptable. But their approach is to allow improvement to occur at
a rate that the industry is happy with, rather than one that the protection
of people's fundamental rights demands.

The preferred approach of the industry body, the Minerals Council of
Australia, is to encourage companies to work towards the standards set down
in its Code for Environmental Management. This has been in place since 1996
and has now been signed on to by some 40 Australian mining companies,
including all the major ones. Its strength, says the council's executive
director 'lies in the fact that companies volunteer to commit within a
framework of principles, and can choose to implement the code in a way that
is appropriate to their operations and their environments. The code works
because it gives the industry flexibility to choose how it goes about
achieving excellence in environmental behaviour.'

The problem is that the code is voluntary, its principles are vague and
general, and only refer to the management of environmental effects, not
social or economic impacts. There is no monitoring of companies' performance
against the code - although there is an obligation for signatory companies
to report annually on their own performance. And there are no sanctions for
non-compliance. While most of the majors have signed on, large numbers of
smaller mining companies have not. Those that want to continue with
sub-standard practices will never sign on.

It is not good enough for the industry to set its own rate of change, with
no sanction for unacceptable behaviour. What would be the reaction if we
applied this approach to other groups in society with the potential to
damage the rights of others, eg drivers who drink?

*Australian government *

The code may have its place as a mechanism for self-improvement by
companies, but it is not a substitute for legislation and enforced
standards. The Australian government urgently needs to introduce legislation
that sets standards for Australian-based mining companies operating
overseas, monitors performance and, where possible, imposes sanctions for
non-compliance.

An independent complaints mechanism needs to be established able to
investigate the complaints of mine-affected communities in Indonesia and
elsewhere. In the absence of any such commitment by the industry or
government, Community Aid Abroad earlier this year established its own
Mining Ombudsman. But this is a responsibility that properly belongs to the
Australian mining industry and government, not to a small under-resourced
non-government organisation.

Political support for stronger measures by government is growing. In April
this year the Australian Labor Party's shadow ministers for foreign affairs,
Laurie Brereton, and for environment and heritage, Nick Bolkus, issued a
joint media statement in which they 'renewed Labor's call for a
comprehensive review of environmental protection standards and practices
implemented by Australian mining countries operating overseas'. Mr Brereton
added: 'Labor has long supported an active role for government in
encouraging Australian companies operating overseas to adhere to public
codes which commit them to observe international human rights standards,
including core labour standards, and ensure that their operations do not
directly or indirectly violate human rights, or inflict unacceptable impacts
on local communities and the environment."

In September 2000, Australian Democrats senator Vicki Bourne introduced a
private member's bill into the senate that sought to introduce legislated
standards for Australian companies operating overseas. This has since been
referred to a parliamentary committee, which has announced a public inquiry
into the matter.

Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney has introduced a similar bill into the US
Congress. The European Parliament recently passed a resolution on EU
Standards for European Enterprises Operating in Developing Countries, which
would cover companies like Rio Tinto and BP that have gold and coal mines in
East Kalimantan.

It is now time for the Australian government to act. *Australia's supposed
concern for human rights in Indonesia must be extended to include economic
and social rights. At the very least it must ensure that it is not
Australian companies that are abusing those rights. *


*Jeff Atkinson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is Advocacy Coordinator with the
non-government organisation Community Aid Abroad (Oxfam Australia) and is
that organisation's Mining Ombudsman. He is the author of the recent book
'Undermined: The impact of Australian mining companies in developing
countries' (Melbourne: Community Aid Abroad, 1998).*


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]





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