Australian mining magnate Rinehart makes media push
SYDNEY |
(Reuters) - When Australian mining mogul Gina Rinehart, one of the
world's richest women, flew to Cambodia to meet former trafficked
children whose education she was financing, she was showing a little
known side of her character.
The "Pilbara Princess" is one of Australia's most written about personalities for her ruthless business dealings, a fortune from family mining interests and an endless string of lawsuits, including against her own children, to protect those riches.
She has not been
feted for her softer side or public largesse. But during that Cambodia
trip in 2010, Rinehart also took girls from an orphanage to the
hairdresser and bought clothes, toiletries and refrigerators for them,
moving the home's manager to tears.
It
would have made for a perfect feel-good story, except that the
58-year-old Rinehart, the only child of one of Australia's legendary
frontier miners, refused to talk about it, save in an article she wrote
herself for an inflight magazine.
Her
disdain for the mainstream media has never been hidden, but Rinehart is
now building up a stake in that very industry, heightening concerns
about a conflux of vested interests and media power.
In recent months, she has taken a 10 percent stake in free-to-air TV operator Ten Network Holdings (TEN.AX) and joined the board alongside publishing scions Lachlan Murdoch and James Packer.
She is also engaged in a high-profile war with Fairfax Media (FXJ.AX) for board representation after becoming the top shareholder of Australia's largest newspaper group.
"She's
part of a pattern of the mining industry asserting itself in very
political ways," says David McKnight, an associate professor in
Journalism and Media at the University of New South Wales.
"She's
idiosyncratic and she has a personal agenda but she's also part of a
really fundamental structural change in the Australian economy."
STAGGERING WEALTH
Rinehart's interest in media has coincided with an explosion of media interest in her, driven by her huge wealth.
A
string of deals and booming commodity prices have helped her convert a
modest inherited fortune into a staggering sum. Forbes in February
estimated her to be worth $18 billion, making her the richest woman in
Asia. Australia's BRW magazine subsequently named her the richest woman
in the world, worth an estimated $29 billion. Rinehart herself claims to
have increased her inheritance by 40,000 percent.
Helping
fuel public fascination, Rinehart is fighting an acrimonious legal
battle with three of her four children, who are trying to remove her as
trustee of a multi-billion-dollar family trust.
Due
back in court this week, Rinehart has tried unsuccessfully to have the
hearings held behind closed doors and has issued subpoenas against The
West Australian newspaper, seeking access to confidential sources
following its reporting of the battle.
Despite
her sometimes difficult relationship with the press, Rinehart has
declared herself to be a "white knight" for Fairfax, the publisher of
the Sydney Morning Herald and Australian Financial Review. She has
issued an ultimatum to its chairman to improve the struggling company's
performance or resign, but questions about her goals beyond that remain
unanswered.
Rinehart, who seldom gives interviews, declined to comment for this article.
Many
point to her father Lang Hancock's establishment of two newspapers, now
defunct, in the 1960s and 1970s to espouse his right-wing ideas as a
signal post for his daughter's intentions.
"I
think it is all related and harks back to her father's views that the
media is a useful vessel to get messages across and sway political
policy," said Adele Ferguson, who spent 18 months researching Rinehart
for a recently released unauthorized biography.
Lang
Hancock is an enormous figure in Australia's mining history. Legend has
it that he discovered the world's largest deposit of iron ore in
Pilbara, Western Australia while flying low in a rocky gorge when piloting a light plane through a storm in the early 1950s.
He
spent years lobbying the then government to remove a ban on exporting
ore and made a fortune when they did, selling valuable tenements and
partnering with some of the biggest mining names in the world.
A
polarizing figure, Hancock proposed using small nuclear bombs to help
mine the Outback, advocated secession for Western Australia and had
business dealings with the brutal Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu.
His disparaging comments on the unemployed and Aborigines outraged
liberals.
"FELLA"
Rinehart
appears to have inherited both the business sense and the bullish,
take-no-prisoners characteristics of the man who called his only child
"fella" as he took her on business meetings from the age of 13.
Rinehart
was educated in Perth but has spent much of her life in the Pilbara, a
500,000-square-kilometre, or 190,000-square-mile stretch of ancient red
earth, searing heat and still the single largest source of iron ore in
the world.
Since her father's death
in 1992 at the age of 82, Rinehart as executive chairman of Hancock
Prospecting Pty Ltd, has transformed her father's discovery into a
company of global scale.
Her Hope Downs joint venture with iron ore giant Rio Tinto (RIO.AX)
generates huge cash flows and the $10 billion Roy Hill iron ore
project, whose investors include Korean and Japanese companies, promises
to be another big money-spinner.
A
passionate nationalist and vocal climate change skeptic, Rinehart's
opposition to taxes and calls for miners to be allowed exemptions from
laws prohibiting the use of foreign labor have put her on a collision
course with government and unions.
"I
fear Australia's extraordinary success has never been in more jeopardy
than right now because of the rising power of vested interests,"
Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan wrote in an opinion piece mentioning
Rinehart and other mining magnates by name. "This poison has infected
our politics and is seeping into our economy."
Rinehart's
rising profile has put her back in the spotlight 20 years after a very
public legal battle with her father's widow Rose Porteous, a Filipina
housekeeper who married Hancock after Rinehart's mother died.
The
decade-long court cases revealed salacious family details, references
to black magic, hitmen and poison, and intimate moments between Hancock
and Porteous, before the two women settled out of court without making
details of the settlement public.
KEEN LITIGANT
Since then, Rinehart has regularly been in court, battling her father's former business partner and mining giant BHP Billiton (BHP.AX) among others, earning her a reputation as a keen litigant.
But it is details of the latest battles with her children that have generated the most headlines.
Just
days before the family trust was due to vest, Rinehart changed the
vesting date to 2068 when her four children will be in their 80s and
90s.
The children are the offspring
of Rinehart's first husband Greg Milton, who became a taxi driver after
their divorce, and her second husband Frank Rinehart, who had moved to
Australia after pleading guilty in the United States to criminal tax
fraud. Frank Rinehart died of a heart attack in 1990.
Family
e-mails made public as part of the trust case showed Gina Rinehart
describing the elder trio of children of being lazy and spoilt, and
warning that their security would be at risk if they persisted with the
action. Typed missives often ended with "Regards Mother. Dictated not
read."
Rinehart's criticisms rankle
with John Hancock, 36, her eldest child and only son, who was dumped
from the Hancock Prospecting board by his mother less than eighteen
months after being appointed in 1997.
Hancock,
who recently released a statement telling kidnappers not to bother with
him as his mother would pay no ransom, now has a half-share in a
start-up building company which hopes to revolutionize the industry with
a product that removes the need for load-bearing concrete columns.
"I've
got an MBA, I'm managing a company that is building houses in Western
Australia and possibly around the world," Hancock told Reuters.
"I'm
not really quite sure what she means via her repeated broadcasts about
non-working or unable to administer something as simple as a trust," he
adds. "What would satisfy her, I don't know, I don't have mining
tenements because she has got them all in the family company."
Hancock's ability to talk about his mother, however, is limited by a series of gagging orders.
"I'm
not allowed to disparage her; indeed my public comments tend to
highlight her intelligence, but it's open slather (season) in
disparaging the now adult children."
London-based
Ginia Rinehart has sided with her mother in the dispute and has been
rewarded as the heir apparent, an honor that has been passed from one to
the other sibling over the years.
An insight into Rinehart's thinking came in a rare interview shortly after a brush with death following routine surgery in 2008.
"We
all know far too many stories where the third generation just destroys
everything the first two have built up and I certainly hope my family
are different, because I've worked too hard and my father has worked too
hard for it to be given away," she said.
Regardless of the outcome of her battle with Fairfax -- and with her children -- one thing seems certain.
"Rinehart
is one of the most fascinating characters in Australia and is fast
becoming an unstoppable force in business, the media and politics," says
Ferguson, her unauthorized biographer. "We haven't seen anything yet.
Australia is about to see a lot more of Gina."
(Editing by Lincoln Feast and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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