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Oxfam Australia's Mining Ombudsman Shanta Martin attended the APEC Ministers Responsible for Mining forum held in Perth in February 2007. Oxfam lobbied for a halt to the dumping of mine waste into water systems. Photo: OxfamAUS

The Mining Ombudsman project

Over the past few decades, the Australian mining industry has become more active in developing countries where it is increasingly affecting poor and vulnerable communities.

Many communities have reported human rights violations, environmental degradation and poverty as a result of these mining operations yet have no official outlet for their grievances or the means to seek redress.

Oxfam Australia attempts to address this accountability gap though our Mining Ombudsman project which:

The Mining Ombudsman process

The Mining Ombudsman generally takes up a case on the request of a community organisation, checking all claims through site investigations and consulting with the community before taking action.

We follow a formal process (PDF 31k) which aims to bring together the views of communities, companies and governments to establish a clear picture of the case.

Find out more

The Mining Ombudsman's guiding principles for an effective complaints mechanism (3.5MB PDF)
The Mining Ombudsman's benchmarks for the mining industry (PDF 54KB)
The concept of free, prior and informed consent
This principle states that individuals and communities should be informed – in appropriate, accessible language – about projects that might take place on their land. It also guarantees that they are given the opportunity to give, withhold or negotiate land use and related issues.