THE Ngurrara people of the southern Kimberley have been recognised as native title holders over an area of Western Australia bigger than Tasmania.
Federal Court Justice John Gilmour travelled to Pirnini, near the Kurlku community in the Great Sandy Desert, to deliver the determination.
As native title holders, the Ngurrara people have the right to own and occupy about 76,000 square kilometres of unallocated crown land south of Fitzroy Crossing to the exclusion of all others.
They can also now use the flowing and underground waters for hunting, fishing and other traditional activities.
The claim was first lodged in 1996 but was amended several times to deal with an overlap of land with the neighbouring Martu native title claim area.
Native Title Tribunal member Daniel O'Dea mediated the claim between the Ngurrara people, the State Government, the Shire of Derby and West Kimberley and the Martu people.
Mr O'Dea said negotiations moved quickly once agreement was reached on the Ngurrara people's connection to the land.
"After 11 years, in May this year it was settled that the Ngurrara people had maintained a strong connection to their land,'' Mr O'Dea said.
"It then took only six meetings for the rights and interests to be agreed on and the resultant consent determination.''
More than 5,600sq km of overlapping land with the Martu native title claim around the Percival Lakes region has been acknowledged as a common shared area between the claimant groups.
Kimberley Land Council Executive Director Wayne Bergmann, who acted for the Ngurrara people, said securing native title would help the traditional owners look after their culture and environment while also generating jobs.
"Being recognised as the rightful owners of our traditional lands means Aboriginal communities can take control of country and of our own future and that is why traditional owners work so hard to secure native title,'' Mr Bergmann said.
"We live in the modern world, and we need to find ways to combine the modern world with our history and culture.''
About 25 per cent of WA now has native title determination over it, the highest proportion in the country.
AAP
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