-
Liverpool's Isak faces two months out after 'reckless' tackle: Slot
-
Thailand-Cambodia border meeting in doubt over venue row
-
For director Josh Safdie, 'Marty Supreme' and Timothee Chalamet are one and the same
-
Kyiv's wartime Christmas showcases city's 'split' reality
-
Gazans fear renewed displacement after Israeli strikes
-
Locals sound alarm as Bijagos Islands slowly swallowed by sea
-
Markets mostly rise as rate cut hopes bring Christmas cheer
-
Cambodia asks Thailand to move border talks to Malaysia
-
In Bulgaria, villagers fret about euro introduction
-
Key to probe England's 'stag-do' drinking on Ashes beach break
-
Delayed US data expected to show solid growth in 3rd quarter
-
Thunder bounce back to down Grizzlies, Nuggets sink Jazz
-
Amazon says blocked 1,800 North Koreans from applying for jobs
-
Trump says US needs Greenland 'for national security'
-
Purdy first 49er since Montana to throw five TDs as Colts beaten
-
Australia captain Cummins out of rest of Ashes, Lyon to have surgery
-
North Korea's Kim tours hot tubs, BBQ joints at lavish new mountain resort
-
Asian markets rally again as rate cut hopes bring Christmas cheer
-
Australian state poised to approve sweeping new gun laws, protest ban
-
Trapped under Israeli bombardment, Gazans fear the 'new border'
-
Families want answers a year after South Korea's deadliest plane crash
-
Myanmar's long march of military rule
-
Disputed Myanmar election wins China's vote of confidence
-
Myanmar junta stages election after five years of civil war
-
Ozempic Meals? Restaurants shrink portions to match bite-sized hunger
-
'Help me, I'm dying': inside Ecuador's TB-ridden gang-plagued prisons
-
Australia's Cummins, Lyon out of fourth Ashes Test
-
US singer Barry Manilow reveals lung cancer diagnosis
-
'Call of Duty' co-creator Vince Zampella killed in car crash
-
Zenwork Joins CERCA to Support IRS Modernization and Strengthen National Information Reporting Infrastructure
-
Cellbxhealth PLC Announces Holding(s) in Company
-
Top Gold IRA Companies 2026 Ranked (Augusta Precious Metals, Lear Capital and More Reviewed)
-
Karviva Announces Launch of Energy and ACE Collagen Juices at Gelson's Stores This December
-
MindMaze Therapeutics: Consolidating a Global Approach to Reimbursement for Next-Generation Therapeutics
-
Decentralized Masters Announced as the Best Crypto Course of 2025 (Courses on Cryptocurrency Ranked)
-
Trump says would be 'smart' for Venezuela's Maduro to step down
-
Steelers' Metcalf suspended two games over fan outburst
-
Salah, Foster take Egypt and South Africa to AFCON Group B summit
-
Napoli beat Bologna to lift Italian Super Cup
-
Salah snatches added-time winner for Egypt after Zimbabwe scare
-
Penalty king Jimenez strikes for Fulham to sink Forest
-
Kansas City Chiefs confirm stadium move
-
Liverpool rocked by Isak blow after surgery on broken leg
-
Liverpool rocked by Isak blow after surgery on ankle injury
-
US stocks push higher while gold, silver notch fresh records
-
Deadly clashes in Aleppo as Turkey urges Kurds not to be obstacle to Syria's stability
-
Is the United States after Venezuela's oil?
-
Trump admin halts US offshore wind projects citing 'national security'
-
Right wing urges boycott of iconic Brazilian flip-flops
-
From misfits to MAGA: Nicki Minaj's political whiplash
Indigenous Australian activists fight for ancient rock art
Two Indigenous Australian activists are fighting to save 40,000-year-old sacred rock art in Western Australia from pollution and plans for a major gas project.
Destruction in 2020 of Aboriginal rock shelters at Juukan Gorge by mining company Rio Tinto shocked the world, sparking condemnation, resignations, inquiries and promised reforms.
Now, First Nations women Raelene Cooper and Josie Alec warn the same could happen "in slow motion" at Murujuga, which lies about 1,300 kilometres north of Perth.
Alec and Cooper hope to garner global support by travelling this week from Australia's remote Pilbara region to Geneva to address the United Nations about their concerns -- particularly if gas giant Woodside's Scarborough project goes ahead.
Cooper told AFP that decay was already visible in the Murujuga rock art, which is sacred to the Indigenous custodians of the land and contains their traditional lore.
Alec said that due to industrial pollution "the rock art will disappear. We will have no rock art to show the world."
Woodside's Aus$16 billion (US$11 billion) Scarborough gas project would see 13 wells drilled off the coast of Western Australia to tap into a huge underwater reserve.
The company predicts that at full capacity, Scarborough will produce eight million tonnes of liquefied natural gas annually -- prompting a backlash from green groups over its carbon emissions potential.
Last month the Australian Conservation Fund launched a legal challenge against the Scarborough project, claiming it would create emissions extensive enough to harm the World Heritage-listed Great Barrier Reef.
Cooper and Alec point out that Murujuga has also been nominated for a World Heritage listing, in part because of the cultural value of its estimated one million petroglyphs, or rock carvings.
Destruction of the rock art, Alec said, "will kill our stories. And it kills a very part of who we are."
"We already visibly see the decay... the patina on the rock art itself flaking away, and the images are starting to wear," Cooper said.
Save Our Songlines, a campaign launched by both women, links the degradation of the art to pollution from industrial production on the resource-rich Burrup Peninsula.
- 'Run out of time' -
Chemicals such as nitrous oxide settle on the art, the campaign says, rendering it vulnerable to degradation when rain falls.
Woodside said in a statement that "peer-reviewed research has not demonstrated any impacts on Burrup rock art from emissions associated with Woodside's operations".
But Save Our Songlines points to a 2021 study from the University of Western Australia, which concluded that "with the currently recorded acidity levels, the rock patina and associated art will degrade and disappear over time".
Woodside dismissed that study as not including "any original research and consequently (it) does not enhance or expand the existing science".
But Alec and Cooper say they can see Murujuga, the land they have sworn to protect and care for, changing before their eyes -- from the rock art to the disappearance of plants and animals.
"There's something critically wrong," Alec said.
"And there's only one explanation for that, and that is the chemicals, the mining, the gas, the oil... they are creating destruction."
The pair hope that speaking to the UN's Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which provides expertise to the Human Rights Council, will see industry and government in Australia held to account.
They want First Nations custodians to be better consulted about new industry on their land -- noting that women have been sidelined in the approvals process.
They have also called for Murujuga to receive World Heritage listing next year, an acknowledgement that would grant more leverage to argue for the region's protection.
"The time is now, we've already run out of time," Alec said.
W.Nelson--AT