Yindjibarndi people
The Yindjibarndi are an Aboriginal Australian people of the Pilbara region of Western Australia. They form the majority of Aboriginal people around Roebourne (the Millstream area).[1] Their traditional lands lie around the Fortescue River.[2]
Language
Yindjibarndi, with around 1000 speakers has been called the most innovative descendant of then proto-Ngayarta language.[3] It is mutually intelligible with Kurruma. Due to their displacement in the colonisation process which forced them into Roebourne, many speakers are Ngarluma people who have adopted Yindjibarndi. Their spatial concepts regarding landscape of do not translate with any equivalent conceptual extension into English.[4][5]
Ecology
Traditionally, until the arrival of Europeans, the Yindjibarndi lived along the middle sector of the valley through which the Fortescue River runs, and the nearby uplands. Beginning in the 1860s pastoralists established cattle stations on their homeland, and the Yindjibarndi were herded into settlements. Today most of them are congregated in and around the traditional Ngarluma territory whose centre is Roebourne.[6]
Native title
The mining magnate Andrew Forrest head of Fortescue Metals Group, which extracts ore at the Solomon iron ore hub on the Yindjibarndi's traditional land, waged a 14-year legal battle to assert the company's rights against the people's aspirations to have native title. In 2017, the Federal Court of Australia recognised that the Yindjibarndi had exclusive rights over some 2,700 square kilometres (1,000 sq mi), and the court reaffirmed its decision again in 2020 when FMG appealed to have the determination overturned.[7]
Yindjibardni People, alongside the Ngarluma People, are also a party to the Land Access agreement for the Woodside-operated North West Shelf Gas Project,[8] executed in 1998. Under the agreement, Ngarluma and Yindjibarndi People remain the Traditional Owner representatives for the North West Shelf Project area, which includes the Karratha Gas Plant.
The 1998 agreement established the Ngarluma Yindjibarndi Foundation Ltd (NYFL).[9] NYFL continues to operate out of Roebourne. NYFL delivers social and economic benefits for the Ngarluma and Yindjibarndi people, and the broader Roebourne community.
According to the Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC):
“The Yindjibarndi people, from the Pilbara in the north-west of the state, are seeking compensation from Fortescue Metals Group (FMG), led by Andrew Forrest.
The Aboriginal people were enshrined as traditional owners of their land by the High Court in 2020 after a long-running dispute with the mining company.
This year Yindjibarndi Aboriginal Corporation (YAC) asked the Federal Court to make a ruling on compensation after negotiations over a land use agreement failed.
The 2020 decision confirmed YAC, which represents traditional owners, have "exclusive possession" of their country.
This means they can sue for economic and cultural loss as FMG were effectively mining on Yindjibarndi land without permission.”[10]
Notes
Citations
- ^ Rodan 2004, p. 112, n.38.
- ^ Traditional Country n.d.
- ^ O'Grady & Hale 2004, p. 71.
- ^ Mark & Turk 2003, pp. 29–45.
- ^ Turk et al. 2012, pp. 368–391.
- ^ Turk et al. 2012, p. 373.
- ^ Jenkins 2020.
- ^ "Ngarluma Yindjibarndi Foundation". Business News. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
- ^ NYFL (2022). "Ngarluma and Yindjibarndi Foundation Ltd". NYFL. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Robinson, Tom (6 November 2022). "Yindjibarndi people ask for landmark Fortescue Metals case to be heard on-country in remote WA". ABC News. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
Sources
- "AIATSIS map of Indigenous Australia". AIATSIS. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
- Jenkins, Keira (29 May 2020). "Fortescue Metals Group has lost a High Court appeal to overturn Native Title rights over 2,700 square kilometres (1,000 sq mi) of land in the Pilbara, including the site of an iron ore mine". SBS. NITV.
- Mark, David M.; Turk, Andrew G (2003). "Landscape Categories in Yindjibarndi: Ontology, Environment and Language". In Kuhn, Werner; Worboys, Michael F.; Timpf, Sabine (eds.). Spatial Information Theory. Foundations of Geographic Information Science. Springer. pp. 29–45. ISBN 978-3-540-20148-9 – via Internet Archive.
- O'Grady, Geoff; Hale, Kenneth L. (2004). "The Coherence and distinctiveness of the Pama-Nyungan language family within the Australian linguistic phylum". In Bowern, Claire; Koch, Harold James (eds.). Australian Languages: Classification and the Comparative Method. John Benjamins Publishing. pp. 69–91. ISBN 978-9-027-24761-2.
- Rodan, Debbie (2004). Identity and Justice: Conflicts, Contradictions and Contingencies. Peter Lang. ISBN 978-9-052-01197-4.
- "Tindale Tribal Boundaries" (PDF). Department of Aboriginal Affairs, Western Australia. September 2016.
- Turk, Andrew G; Mark, David M.; O'Meara, Caroline; Stea, David (2012). "Geography: Documenting Terms for Landscape Features". In Thieberger, Nick (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Fieldwork. Oxford University Press. pp. 368–391. ISBN 978-0-199-57188-8.
- "Yindjibarndi: The People and their Traditional Country". Wangka Maya Pilbara Aboriginal Language Centre. n.d. Retrieved 22 March 2022.