Uranium Mining Urgency Resolution
On the 15th of January 2000 the European Parliament Uranium Mining Urgency Resolution was adopted unamended with:
115 FOR, 85 AGAINST and 13 ABSTENTIONS.
The European Parliament
recalling the provisions on the rights of Indigenous peoples made of the
Vienna Declaration adopted by the World Conference on Human Rights
stressing the protection of Indigenous peoples, economic, social and
cultural well-being including their distinct identities and cultures;
recalling the principles of Agenda 21 and of the Convention on
Biological Diversity
mindful of its numerous resolutions on the rights of Indigenous peoples
and in particular of its resolutions B4-0062, 0067 and 0103/95;
A3-0059/93.
mindful of the objection of the Australian government to a human
rights clause within the Cooperation Agreement between Australia and
the European Union;
concerned about the recent decision of the Australian government to
consider the development of the Jabiluka uranium project which is
located in an area surrounded by the World Heritage Kakadu National
Park;
aware of the motion of the Australian Senate from 20 October 1997
calling on the Australian government not to proceed with the project;
aware of the fact that the Jabiluka site as well as the nearby Ranger
uranium mining operations are located on legally recognised aboriginal
territory;
considering the fact that the sites are of significance for the cultural
heritage of the aborginal peoples;
noting that the project evaluation by Environment Australia has
resulted in concerns regarding its impacts on wilderness and world
heritage values as well as on radioactive tailings;
concerned about the health effects of the already existing mining
facilities at Roxby Downs, Ranger and the currently planned Jabiluka
project for the aboriginal people;
noting that Australia is exporting uranium into the European Union;
The European Parliament
calls on the Australian Government to respect the status of the
Kakadu National Park as a World Heritage site;
calls on the Australian Government to respect the landrights of the
Aboriginal Peoples as well as the provisions on indigenous peoples
provided by the Vienna Declaration;
calls on therefore on the Australian Government not to proceed with the
project;
calls on the Commission to obtain an independent study about the
uranium imports of the European Union analysing the impact of uranium
mining and processing on health and environment, on the rights of
Indigenous peoples and on waste production of the mining operations in
regard to the respective country of origin;
calls on the Member States, as a first step, to ban all imports of
uranium from mines where the landrights of Indigenous Peoples are
being compromised;
calls on its Subcommittee on Human Rights to closely monitor the case;
instructs its president to forward this resolution to the Council, the
Commission, the Member States, the Australian Government, the
Australian Senate, the Northern Aboriginal Land Council and the
International Atomic Energy Agency.
This resolution with focus on Australia will also be used to accuse other
countries of the violations of basic human rights toward Indigenous Peoples.
|