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Australian miner Fortescue to pay $108 million for damage to Indigenous group’s land

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SYDNEY, May ‌12 (Reuters) - An Australian court ​on Tuesday ordered miner Fortescue to pay ⁠A$150 million ($108 million) in compensation to an Indigenous group for cultural ​loss caused by iron ore mining ‌on their land without their permission.

The decision marks one of the largest ever ⁠payouts in Australia's history ⁠brought under native title laws recognising Indigenous rights and interests in certain parcels of land.

Federal Court ‌Judge Stephen Burley found the miner, ⁠founded by billionaire Andrew ‌Forrest, caused "significant damage" ​to the cultural heritage of the Yindjibarndi people of Western Australia.

The Solomon ‌Hub Project, Fortescue's flagship ​iron ore ⁠mining operation located in the ‌state of Western ⁠Australia, had "completely destroyed" 124 heritage sites identified by the company, and many ​more had ‌been substantially affected, Burley said.

($1 = 1.3854 ⁠Australian dollars)

(Reporting by ​Alasdair Pal in Sydney; Editing ​by Christian Schmollinger)

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