Audio By Carbonatix
The Minister of Lands and Natural Resources, Samuel Abu Jinapor, has dismissed calls for his resignation over the government's handling of illegal mining widely known as galamsey.
According to him, there is no need to step down, stating that while people are entitled to their opinions in a democracy, he disagrees with calls for his removal.
Read also: Government committed to sustainable and legal mining – Lands Ministry insists
In an interview on Joy FM's Newsnight on Thursday, September 12 he said: “I have heard other groups say that the president should be impeached and so and so forth. In a democracy, with the greatest of respect, people are entitled to express views and so on and so forth. I don’t find the need for that,” he stated.
Groups like the Coalition of Civil Society Organisations in Agriculture, Aquaculture, and Fisheries have called for the minister's removal claiming he and his deputies have failed to address the galamsey crisis, leading to environmental degradation, including the depletion of forests and destruction of water bodies.
Some members of the clergy have also called for the minister's resignation.
Read also: Galamsey: CAG calls for resignation of Lands Minister; deputies
But Mr Jinapor maintained that the government has made significant efforts in the fight against illegal mining.
He however noted that to achieve the ultimate results, there is a need for a collective effort to address the situation adding that the government is fully committed.
Asked whether he accepts to have failed since the water turbidity level is at 14,000 NTU, he replied: “I am not looking at this matter from the point of failure or success. The most important thing is that we have a framework and if we have to tweak it, we will do so.
“I have seen turbidity levels over the period go up and down… what is actually important is that we continue with the effort and that is exactly what we are trying to do.”
Latest Stories
-
UK remains preferred study destination for Ghanaians – British Council
3 minutes -
Ghana Medical Trust Fund: Maame Samma Peprah ignites chain of giving through ‘Kyerɛ Wo Dɔ Drive’
14 minutes -
A new children’s book celebrates Ghanaian culture and early literacy through food storytelling
23 minutes -
Right To Play deepens fight against child labour through MLMR and MRMF projects
25 minutes -
Former Amansie South DCE, MP unveil TESCON booth initiative for tertiary institutions
47 minutes -
Travel and tour CEO Ishamel Kofi Adjei honoured at Ghana Industry CEOs Awards
1 hour -
How deadly attack on tomato traders in Burkina Faso is reshaping Ghana’s food market
1 hour -
“We will begin the renovation of the State Banquet Hall this year” – Mahama
2 hours -
The death of the media buy: Why world cup 2026 is an attention stress test
2 hours -
UK withdraws Tehran embassy staff as US-Iran tension sparks concern across region
2 hours -
Internal reforms and trade shifts drive IMF upgrade for sub-Saharan Africa to 4.6% in 2026
2 hours -
World Cup ticket resale prices hit record high as June kickoff approaches
2 hours -
Bridging Africa’s education gap: From job seekers to job creators
2 hours -
KNUST, UENR and partners move to close industry skills gap and aid disadvantaged students
2 hours -
Let’s save lives – Akandoh tells hospital staff
3 hours
