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Sexual harassment and assault continue at Rio Tinto, two years after reforms, report shows
A worker for Australia’s Fortescue Metals Group (FMG) watches screens that monitor autonomous vehicles at FMG’s Chichester Hub iron ore operations, which includes the Christmas Creek iron ore mine, in the Pilbara region, located south-east of the coastal town of Port Hedland in Western Australia, November 29, 2018. — Reuters pic

MELBOURNE, Nov 21 — Mining major Rio Tinto said cases of rape and sexual assault at the company persist, a report into the company’s culture showed on Wednesday, two years after the industry faced an Australian state inquiry for its poor treatment of women.

A Western Australian state government report in 2022 recommended sweeping changes after finding sexual harassment and assault were rife in the sector, detailing what it said was horrifying behaviour against women in the mining industry.

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Australian miners including iron ore giants BHP and Fortescue have since taken steps to address sexual harassment, which has been prevalent at remote fly-in fly-out (FIFO) mining operations like Pilbara iron ore.

As part of those measures, Rio Tinto undertook a cultural assessment in early 2022 that outlined a culture of bullying, harassment and racism at the global mining giant, and recommended 26 steps the company should take to improve.

Two years on, an external progress report found Rio had implemented the majority of those changes although there was more work to do at the global miner, which employs some 57,000 people across 35 countries.

The report found eight people reported experiencing actual or attempted sexual assault or rape, compared to five people in 2021. Thirty-two people reported experiencing pressure or requests for sex or sexual acts, compared to 37 people in 2021. The majority of people in both cases were women, the report found.

"I read the report with mixed emotions for the continued hurt that people feel and the unsafe behaviours that people are experiencing,” Rio’s Australia chief, Kellie Parker, told Reuters.

"But I’m also encouraged by how much more people are empowered to speak up.” The miner has fired a "significant” number of people for those behaviours, Parker said, declining to elaborate. "It’s a multi-year journey ... We are staying the course.”

The report found half or nearly half of respondents perceived improvements in relation to bullying, sexual harassment and racism.

However the percentage of people experiencing bullying rose to 39 per cent from 31 per cent, and 7 per cent of survey respondents experienced sexual harassment in the past year, steady from 2021.

That was partly due to increasing retaliation in the form of gendered bullying as a response to Rio Tinto’s efforts to promote gender diversity and inclusion, it said.

A long way to go

One measure the miners have taken to combat harassment is to improve the gender balance in one of Australia’s highest-paid industries. Just over a fifth of their workers now are women, up from 16.3 per cent in 2018, according to Australian government figures.

BHP set a target to get to 40 per cent women in its workforce by 2025, up from 17.6 per cent female in 2016. Having hired some 10,500 more women since then, it has raised female staffing to 37.1 per cent as of this year.

"Absolutely, the Tier One miners have improved, there’s no doubt about it ... but there is still a long way to go,” said Shane Roulstone of Western Mine Workers’ Alliance, which represents workers in Australia’s iron ore region.

Majors have put policies in place and taken concrete actions to cut harassment and improve their gender balance, he said.

However, industry culture was still "pretty poor”, mostly due to middle management and an inconsistent approach among second tier miners and contractors, some of which had made no attempt to stamp out harassment, he said.

Contractors make up 30 per cent of workers among tier one miners, around half of employees at second tier miners and almost all of the workers at small miners, he estimated. — Reuters

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