Theonila Roka Matbob of Papua New Guinea is one in every of this 12 months’s Goldman Environmental Prize winners. She is being acknowledged for her efforts to restore environmental and social harms brought on by a copper and gold mine.
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Goldman Environmental Prize
Theonila Roka Matbob was born in what ought to have been a lush rainforest. Her household’s house is close to the middle of the biggest island in Papua New Guinea’s Autonomous Area of Bougainville within the Pacific Ocean.
As a substitute, she says, the mountains round her have been principally rock and sand. “You need to go miles — into one other area and territory — to seek out the bushes, the forest,” says Roka Matbob, who’s now 35.
She grew up listening to fixed warnings in regards to the atmosphere. “From our grandparents and fogeys, the recommendation you all the time get is: Do not go close to the water. Do not go close to the river. It’s toxic. Don’t eat something that falls onto the bottom,” she remembers. “They usually do not inform you why.”
Roka Matbob began asking questions and, ultimately, she found out the why.
Her work as an activist to restore the environmental and social harms has earned her The Goldman Environmental Prize for 2026. The winners have been introduced Monday: grassroots environmental champions, one in every of the world’s inhabited areas. Roka Matbob gained for the island nations.
The set off for her environmental woes — and activism — is a mine.
Roka Matbob grew up minutes from the Panguna copper and gold mine, which had been developed by Rio Tinto, one of many world’s largest mining corporations with headquarters in Australia and the U.Okay. The mine close to Roka Matbob’s house was run via the subsidiary Bougainville Copper Ltd. Whereas the mine had lengthy been deserted, between 1972 and 1989 it produced hundreds of thousands of tons of copper and a whole lot of tons of gold and silver.
The Panguna mine in Papua New Guinea’s Autonomous Area of Bougainville. The mine has been closed for many years however left environmental scars.
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It additionally provoked a bloody, decade-long civil battle — one which began when rigidity turned to violence because the mining firm introduced in outdoors labor and took out the income. The navy was introduced in to cease the rebellion and the battle developed right into a separatist insurgency. The battle claimed hundreds of lives and wreaked havoc on the group. Only a few days shy of Roka Matbob’s third birthday, her father was taken by an armed group and later killed.
Amid the unrest, the mine shut down. However, Roka Matbob says, that led to new issues. There was no plan to handle environmental injury and contamination.
“I used to be born into that damaged atmosphere. Rising up it is a life on survival mode completely,” Roka Matbob says. She provides that her mom and remaining household have been “nomadic” as they regarded for security. They ended up shifting right into a authorities managed camp.
When a peace settlement was signed, in 1998, Roka Matbob felt it did not tackle the underlying points, together with the continued atmosphere devastation and the way hundreds of individuals have been being “denied a traditional island life.”
Her activism began as a excessive schooler main protests. She went on to turn into the lead complainant in a landmark human rights grievance filed by the Human Rights Legislation Centre in opposition to Rio Tinto. The end result has been hailed as a serious win. In 2021, Rio Tinto agreed to fund an unbiased evaluation and, in 2024, signed a memorandum of understanding to work with the impacted communities to handle and remediate the scenario.
“Theonila is main a historic effort to acquire justice for many years of environmental and social devastation due to the Panguna mine,” says Ilan Kayatsky, of the Goldman Environmental Prize, in a press release to NPR. “She understood that nobody else would step ahead to coordinate a marketing campaign and demand accountability. Her efforts have introduced collectively a coalition intent on enhancing the lives of Bougainvilleans, right this moment and into the longer term.”
NPR spoke with Roka Matbob to be taught extra about her work and perspective on conquering challenges that may really feel insurmountable. This interview has been edited for size and readability.
At what level did you understand that you might make a distinction?
There have been a pair milestones. In 2019, once we — the group — invited the Human Rights Legislation Centre to actually come and take heed to us. Simply listening to us out was, for me, progress.
Then, once they supported us by publishing a report known as “After the mine: Dwelling with Rio Tinto’s lethal legacy,” we obtained a observe from Rio Tinto saying they’ve by no means been on the bottom to grasp the impression. And, to me, it was progress once more: They learn it.
After which, lodging a authorized grievance and Rio Tinto responding in 24 hours was progress as a result of that was a platform the place I may communicate straight [to them].
So that you printed a report and took authorized motion and the mining firm responded. How did that make you are feeling?
It’s a dream come true for me — the chance to symbolize the individuals’s voice and to speak on to the stakeholder who modified our lives. I shed tears to say, lastly, my grandmother did not [get to talk directly to them] however I am going to do this now.
However whereas we welcomed it, while you’re completely in a damaged atmosphere, it doesn’t provide you with house to pause and have fun and transfer on. So, the subsequent layer is: How quickly [can we fix it]? How lengthy is it going to take?
You’ve gotten been preventing for this for a few years. Is there one thing you return to that retains motivating you?
I’m from the Indigenous Nasioi individuals and the Basikang clan, the place the land, the atmosphere is an inseparable a part of my life. That is one thing that I am unable to take calmly.
Did you ever think about merely leaving?
I can’t transfer as a result of, if I’m going to be shifting, I’ll be shifting into one other tribal territory, and that’s thought of a no-go zone. So that is the place my youngsters and grandchildren will reside as properly. We’ll all the time be right here. We’d like an enduring answer, in order that motivates me.
What else motivates you?
Being a mom. No mom would need to go on to her little one a damaged, contaminated portion of the atmosphere. I’ve obtained two youngsters [ages 8 and 4] and there are such a lot of youngsters round who’re their age however do not have moms who’re capable of come out and combat.
You have been one in every of a really small variety of girls elected to Bougainville’s Home of Representatives, the place you continued your advocacy. How have gender dynamics performed into your work?
It is a bit difficult. With politics — the tradition — could be very patriarchal. However, additionally, it is a blessing. [In my clan,] we girls are the land guardians and keepers. There’s this proverb in my language and territory: It takes a lady to cry to start out a combat, and it additionally takes a lady’s tears to dealer peace. So [this fight to get answers and solutions] is known as a lady’s place in the neighborhood.
Theonila Roka Matbob (proper) and group members in Papua New Guinea’s Autonomous Area of Bougainville. Roka Matbob says she and her neighbors will resolve the way to spend the cash that comes along with her Goldman Environmental Prize.
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This Goldman honor comes with a money prize. What do you propose to do with it?
That is a call to make with the group. It takes a village to create a win. So it takes a village to make that call as properly.
When will you are feeling your work is completed? When there is a inexperienced rainforest round you?
No. The injury brought about is irreversible. I’ll work as long as this activism brings hope to the individuals. I need them to have the ability to perceive their whys and begin transiting out of residing in survival mode to residing in thriving mode.
