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Rio Tinto probe discovers rape, pressure for sex continues at miner

Mining major Rio Tinto said cases of rape and sexual assault at the business persist, a report into the business's culture showed on Wednesday, 2 years after the industry dealt with an Australian state inquiry for its bad treatment of females.

A Western Australian state federal government report in 2022 recommended sweeping changes after discovering unwanted sexual advances and assault were swarming in the sector, detailing what it stated was horrifying behaviour against females in the mining industry.

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

As part of those steps, Rio Tinto carried out a cultural assessment in early 2022 that outlined a culture of bullying, harassment and bigotry at the worldwide mining giant, and suggested 26 actions the company ought to take to improve.

2 years on, an external development report found Rio had executed the majority of those changes although there was more work to do at the worldwide miner, which uses some 57,000 people throughout 35 nations.

The report found 8 individuals reported experiencing real or tried sexual assault or rape, compared to 5 individuals in 2021. Thirty-two people reported experiencing pressure or requests for sex or sexual acts, compared to 37 people in 2021. Most of people in both cases were women, the report discovered.

I read the report with blended emotions for the continued hurt that individuals feel and the hazardous behaviours that people are experiencing, Rio's Australia chief, Kellie Parker, informed Reuters.

But I'm also encouraged by just how much more individuals are empowered to speak out. The miner has fired a substantial. variety of people for those behaviours, Parker said, decreasing to. intricate. It's a multi-year journey ... We are remaining the. course.

The report discovered half or almost half of respondents. viewed enhancements in relation to bullying, sexual. harassment and bigotry.

Nevertheless the portion of individuals experiencing bullying. increased to 39% from 31%, and 7% of study participants experienced. sexual harassment in the previous year, constant 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 addition, it said.

(source: Reuters)