
Daily news digest May 20
The major Indigenous news stories in Australia today focus on a historic native title mining payout, local community enterprise disputes, and a severe diphtheria health alert.
Legal & Land Rights
Historic Compensation Payout Slammed:
The Federal Court awarded the Yindjibarndi Ngurra Aboriginal Corporation a record $150 million compensation payout for cultural losses. This follows a long-standing native title battle against billionaire Andrew Forrest’s Fortescue Metals Group. Community leaders have expressed severe disappointment, noting the figure falls drastically short of the $1.8 billion originally sought for unauthorised mining on their lands.
Whadjuk Corporation Served Notice:
The Whadjuk Aboriginal Corporation has been hit with a default notice by Perpetual. The action follows the abrupt resignation of two key board members.
Health & Community Welfare

Severe Diphtheria Outbreak:
Medical officials are urging immediate vaccine booster renewals across Indigenous communities, particularly in the Kimberley region and the Northern Territory. The Central Australian Aboriginal Congress confirmed a tragic death from the disease. Indigenous cases make up an overwhelming 98% of the worsening nationwide outbreak.
Child Protection Law Pushback:
Former senior child protection staffers in the Northern Territory are openly criticising local law changes. They label the government’s approach as a “knee-jerk” reaction that risks causing disproportionate harm to Aboriginal children.
Arts, Media & International
Global Storytelling Fund Launched:
Screen Australia’s First Nations Strategy branch announced the First Nations Factual Co-production Development Fund. The initiative aims to help mid-to-established Indigenous filmmakers elevate factual stories into global markets at the 2026 Toronto International Film Festival.






