The Northern Territory government is taking too long to punish those responsible for a radioactive spill on Aboriginal land in Kakadu, traditional owners say.
They have set their sights on the Department of Mines and Energy, which has investigated the 2013 spill of up to 1.5 million litres of acidic slurry from a collapsing leach tank at the Energy Resources of Australia operated Ranger uranium mine.
But the department is yet to share its report with stakeholders, despite a request six months ago from the Office of the Supervising Scientist.
The Gundjeihmi Aboriginal Corporation, which acts for the Mirarr traditional owners, says the delay is "completely unacceptable" especially given ERA was able to restart operations at Ranger a year ago.
"Members of the investigative taskforce as well as the general public are still waiting for the regulator to release its report, let alone prosecute the mining company," corporation CEO Justin O'Brien said.
The traditional owners want the government to impose a fine, or declare an operational breach for the spill.
The Environment Centre NT claims ERA breached its operating conditions, and in particular a section of the Mine Management Act which requires "no unauthorised release of waste or contaminant".
A department spokeswoman said the incident was still being investigated.
Comment is being sought from ERA.
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