"[It's] good if Ginia did attend. BIANCA Rinehart, 33, granddaughter of mining magnate Lang Hancock, surprised friends and family when she set up home in the Territory with her partner and newborn baby.Her mother Gina whose fortune makes her the second richest Australian has just paid $150 million for a 10 per cent share of the Ten Network.Bianca is tipped to eventually take control of the family business, despite her brother John being older.She was branded a "chip off the grandfather's block" when she said foreign guest workers should be paid below award wages but redeemed herself a little when she said workers in the north of Australia should pay less personal tax. "A long and public court battle won, Bianca is in a happy place and wanted her people around her," the party report read. I love my sister and bear no animus towards her for this approach and I'm addressing it as I strongly feel that nobody should be ashamed to seek help for any mental illness and have the support of their loved ones in so doing," Bianca said in 2013.Earlier this year Bianca was granted permission by the NSW Supreme Court to sue Gina for alleged breaches of duties as trustee of a family trust. Mrs Rinehart's eldest child, John Langley Hancock, 36, has joined with Hope and Bianca in the trust dispute.

Their children John LangleyIn 1999, the Western Australian state government approved a proposal to name a mountain range in honour of her family. "She has really earned her stripes; she is extremely smart and self-motivated," he said. "Foreign Minister Julie Bishop and her partner David Panton were also in attendance. Mrs Rinehart, who is locked in a bitter dispute with Bianca and her brother John Hancock, was not invited to the wedding and had no idea her daughter was married until yesterday, when her lawyers were shown the wedding certificate. She was also treated for depression, not relating to an eating disorder, in 2000 and 2003.At the time Bianca spoke out in defence of Ginia's actions and used the opportunity to advocate for mental health. Meet Bianca Hope Rinehart. After years of messy legal battles it appears sisters Bianca and Ginia Rinehart have reconciled.The daughters of Australia's richest person, Gina Rinehart, were photographed together at an intimate dinner celebrating "A long and public court battle won, Bianca is in a happy place and wanted her people around her," the party report read.Bianca, who replaced her mother as trustee of the estimated $5 billion Hope Margaret Hancock Trust back in 2015, celebrated her "milestone birthday" at the glass-roofed restaurant at Como The Treasury - an establishment voted second-best hotel in the world by leading travel publisher, For years Bianca and Ginia were on different sides of the bitter war over the family's multibillion-dollar trust.Ginia sided with her mother, while Bianca and brother John Hancock, claimed documents and accounts relating to the trust established by their grandfather, Lang Hancock, The 3½-year family rift, that played out in the NSW Supreme Court, initially pitted Ginia, 30, against Bianca. "Bianca and two of her siblings, John and Hope, are currently involved in legal action against their mother over their access to a billion-dollar trust fund set up by Lang. In the early proceedings in 2013, Ginia requested Bianca's medical records relating to any psychological issues become part of an investigation into whether Bianca would be an appropriate person to usurp Gina as manager of the trust.Bianca was diagnosed with an eating disorder at 18 and was treated at a London clinic, which was paid for by Gina. "I guess to try to shield him from it. She is one of Australia's richest people; with Forbes estimating her net worth in 2019 at US$14.8 billion as published in the list of Australia's 50 richest people; and The Australian Financial Review estimating her net worth in 2019 at A$13.81 billion as published in the Financial Gina Rinehart's children WIN access to family fortune - as mining magnate's daughter Bianca is put in charge of $5 BILLION trust. "She is a lovely, intelligent young woman," a family friend told the newspaper. We really wanted to go but my three young children had school in the northern hemisphere and the logistics of getting to Perth were too difficult at that time," he told Fairfax Media.