The Amungme tribe on Thursday filed a $30 billion lawsuit against Freeport
McMoRan, one of the world’s major mining firms, for alleged damages
sustained over 40 years of operations on their ancestral lands in
Indonesia’s Papua province.
share of the wealth it generates,” Titus Natkime, a lawyer for the tribe,
said ahead of the lawsuit hearing at the South Jakarta District Court. He represents about 90 Amungmes who live on the lowlands of a mountainous
area in Papua’s Mimika district, where Freeport runs a gold and copper
mine. “The tribe holds the traditional rights to own the land and all its
resources, but other people took away all the financial benefits from us,”
the lawyer said. The plaintiffs claim they are the legitimate owners of 2.6 million
hectares of land on which the mine is located, and that the 1967 work
contract between the government and Freeport was made without their
approval. They also questioned the promised trust fund of $1 million a year that
they said was never received. The tribe has further accused Freeport of the illegal eviction of
indigenous people, with the support of government troops. The lawsuit is also directed against the government and PT Indocopper
Investama, a Bakrie group company, each owning a 9.36 percent stake in PT
Freeport Indonesia, the local unit of the US-based mining giant. The plaintiffs have demanded that the court fine the defendants “$20
billion for environmental damages caused by the mining activities and $10
billion for human rights violations.” “I have lived there for more than 40 years, and things have been getting
worse since Freeport started to operate,” tribal leader Yunus Omabak said. “We live poorly in our own land, our children live poorly too. We can’t
move because we have no money,” he said. Presiding Judge Suharto suggested mediation for the parties. “You have 40
days to settle the case through dialogue. The court will appoint our
judge, Ahmad Yusak, as mediator.” Freeport spokesman Mindo Pangaribuan said in an e-mail to the Jakarta
Globe that since 2001, the company had paid $25.9 million into a trust
fund, $17 million of which had been withdrawn by two foundations set up by
the Amungme and Kamoro tribes. “Since 1996, PT Freeport Indonesia has allocated 1 percent of its gross
revenue for a society development program, and in 2008 the partnership
fund reached some $324 million,” he said.