
Audio By Carbonatix
The Member of Parliament for Tamale South, Haruna Iddrisu, has called for the impeachment of President Akufo-Addo as a means of addressing the country’s illegal mining popularly known as galamsey.
According to him, the President has failed in his promise to combat galamsey, and impeachment would serve as the most effective solution to hold him accountable.
“There is no more potent solution to ending galamsey than impeaching President Akufo-Addo. If both parties support it then we will be successful then President Mahama will be forewarned that if he becomes President and he fails the galamsey fight same will be done to him,” he said.
Speaking on Joy FM’s Super Morning Show, the former Minority Leader said such an action would send a clear message to future leaders that failure to tackle galamsey would be met with the same consequence.
Read also: Galamsey: Large part of Tano Anwia Forest Reserves decimated by illegal miners
Mr Iddrisu criticised the current situation where, despite the President’s inability to curb illegal mining, he is still being praised.
“We praise him for his failure, and if we continue to honour failure, we will not make progress in addressing the issue,” he lamented.
He called on Parliament to step up and hold the President accountable for failing to safeguard the country’s natural resources and the livelihoods of citizens affected by galamsey.
However, he expressed concern that partisanship would prevent any meaningful action from being taken, even if a motion for impeachment is filed.
“Why should filing a motion seeking to impeach the President for failing to fight galamsey not be considered, given its impact on our forest and water resources and the livelihoods of our people? But when you initiate it, partisanship will take control,” he observed.
The MP therefore urged Parliament to act in the best interest of the nation, calling for an end to political divisions to address the illegal mining crisis effectively.
Conversations on galamsey and its dire impact arose after the management of Ghana Water Company Limited in the Central Region announced that there would be challenges with water supply in Cape Coast, Elmina, and surrounding communities.
This followed a JoyNews documentary titled 'Poisoned Rivers'.
The company revealed that the recent demand-supply gap is due to inadequate raw water received at the Sekyere Hemang Water Treatment Plant (WTP) caused by galamsey activities.
Environmental groups, civil society organisations, and concerned citizens have since voiced their frustrations over the lack of significant progress in curbing galamsey activities, which have resulted in the contamination of rivers, destruction of farmlands, and loss of livelihoods for many Ghanaians.
Latest Stories
-
UBIDS graduates 70 Law students as Bagbin pledges major health and education interventions
3 minutes -
A Lifetime of excellence: Dr Williams Kwasi Peprah attains the rank of full Professor at Andrews University
5 minutes -
Gift to the North: Karaga MP builds 6,000-capacity Mosque in Tamale
7 minutes -
Marketers and creators explore ‘media of influence’ in reshaping marketing performance
15 minutes -
Residents of Amasaman Obeyeyie protest over worsening road conditions
1 hour -
Nyanyofio urges British Columbia College to produce responsible citizens, not only high achievers
1 hour -
Why are coaches sacked but technical leadership spared? – Uncle Ebo Whyte on Black Stars exit
1 hour -
‘Catastrophic expenditure’: Why government must enroll cleft care on NHIS
1 hour -
Nigeria condemns killing of two nationals in South Africa, demands Justice
1 hour -
Photos: Mahama attends Assemblies of God Men’s Ministry Conference
2 hours -
SHS heads advocate publication of disciplinary data to curb indiscipline in schools
2 hours -
Karaga MP Amin Adam Builds 6,000-capacity mosque in Tamale
2 hours -
Attorney-General lays tribunal bill to revive public tribunals in justice system reform
2 hours -
TUC must stop begging and start owning
2 hours -
Fidelity Bank transforms La-Bawaleshie Presby ‘2’ Basic School to enhance learning and student well-being
2 hours