Crime

Take ruthless, uncompromising action against illegal miners …A Rocha, others to government

Four environmen­tal organisations have called on the government to take urgent, ruth­less, decisive and uncompromising action against illegal miners (galamseyers) who have taken the nation hostage with their destructive activists of the country’s forests reserves and water bodies.

“We demand a robust enforcement of laws, and a re­lentless commitment on the part of government in safeguarding the country from the escalating environmental degradation,” said A Rocha Ghana, Kasa Initiative Ghana Nature, Development Foundation and Concerned Citi­zens of Atewa Landscape which form the coalition.

They, therefore, proposed some key recommendations to government which they are of the view, would address the galamsey menace confronting the country.

The Deputy National Direc­tor, A Rocha Ghana, Dr Daryl Bosu, at a press conference in Accra on Friday, mentioned the revocation of Regulation 2022 Legislative Instrument (LI 2462) that permits mining in Ghana’s forest reserves, ushering in an unprecedented state sponsored

target and assault on forest reserve undermining decades of conservation and sustainable man­agement of forests in Ghana.

Adding that there is therefore, no reason why this law continues to exist in our statutes books. Legislative Instrument 2462 must be revoked with immediate effect and all mining concessions issued for forests reserves in Ghana must be revoked as well.

“Now, with the baton back in the hands of an NDC-led gov­ernment, it is clear that we cannot win this battle using yesterday’s strategies, failed leadership, or kid-glove approaches,” Dr Bosu said.

The Coalition, he stated, was calling for the online publication of all tributer mining permits with accompanying tributer tokens and codes so that communities in mining hotspots can do their own verification to improve mineral and mining governance in the country.

In addition, Dr Bosu demand­ed the resourcing of the Forestry Commission with the needed tools and equipment to effectively monitor, regulate, and combat illegal mining.

He lamented the arrest, manhandling, and detention of public officials, including officials of the Forestry Commission who undertook actions to prevent ille­gal mining in the country’s forest reserves.

The shocking aspect of this operation, Dr Bosu explained, was how the police in Kyebi traversed jurisdictions, to effect an arrest of another public officer acting against galamsey impunity when they have consistently failed to address the unprecedented illegal mining activates within their jurisdiction.

This misuse of law enforce­ment, he stated, undermined the rule of law and emboldens those engaged in environmental destruction.

According to him, such incidents constituted an abuse of power and demoralised other state agencies with supportive functions to act and secure other critical national assets and public good.

The sympathetic posture to­ward individuals driving this crisis, he pointed out, had brought Gha­na to the brink of environmental collapse, with polluted food and water systems posing severe health risks for future generations.

BY CYNTHIA ASAMPANA

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