Audio By Carbonatix
The Minister of Lands and Natural Resources has revealed that a review of mining licenses issued in the final days of the previous administration uncovered serious irregularities.
According to Emmanuel Armah Kofi Buah, this prompted the government to take urgent steps to sanitise the licensing regime.
Speaking in an exclusive interview with JoyNews on Wednesday, March 19, Mr Buah disclosed that two committees were set up—one composed of security experts and journalists, and another made up of mining professionals to conduct a comprehensive review of mining activities across the country.
"It was very clear that the licenses from December 7 up were done in a rush without due diligence, and in some cases, some of the reports in the interim report were that some of these communities that are supposed to be impacted were not engaged as required by law. So it was very, very clear that there has to be a restart on those aspects," he stated.
"But we also thought it was important that even though the overall small-scale mining licenses across the border were also fraught with so many problems. The committee had recommended a complete revocation, but after a complete discussion, it was very clear that we still needed to set up a technical team, and that's why today we did that, to basically review and validate all those existing licenses."
The Lands Minister noted that the country is already dealing with multiple challenges, including illegal mining, destruction of our water bodies, and illegal activities in our forests.
"The last thing we want is to make sure that people who have licenses are also adding to the problem. We need to really sanitise the license regime and make sure that those who have licenses are also playing by the rules," the minister stressed.
Mr Buah further lamented that many licensed mining operators were ignoring regulations, failing to renew their permits with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and engaging in what he described as reckless mining practices that destroy forests and water bodies.
"Multiple licenses have been given to people who have not even bothered to follow up on renewals, follow up on the EPA renewals, some of them are completely violating the rules in terms of mining beyond the boundaries that they've been given, and destroying and entering into water bodies.
"The whole process and the guidelines they've been given are complete violations. They are basically engaging in illegal activities," he added.
Latest Stories
-
Kareweh criticises govts for policies that look good but achieve little in agriculture
2 seconds -
Galamsey is killing our cocoa, our water, our future – Minority warns of food security meltdown
3 minutes -
Keta is drowning, not fishing – Minority demands urgent fix to premix fuel breakdown
16 minutes -
Rising attacks on journalists demand better coordination with Security agencies — MFWA
25 minutes -
A nation that left its farmers behind – Minority blasts gov’t over GH¢5bn grain disaster
32 minutes -
Move to scrap OSP is premature, Inusah Fuseini tells Majority caucus
32 minutes -
Farmers’ day losing meaning without real reform — GAWU Warns
35 minutes -
GTA boss outlines three priorities to drive Volta Region’s tourism growth
35 minutes -
Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, actor who performed in ‘Mortal Kombat,’ dies at 75
36 minutes -
Ghana celebrates 41st Farmers’ Day, spotlighting champions of food security
41 minutes -
Recreation Minister Kofi Adams backs ‘Walk With Lexis’ set for December 6
1 hour -
Milo U13 Championship reaches quarter-final with thrilling match-ups
2 hours -
From glut to growth – John Dumelo says value addition is the way forward
3 hours -
Feed Ghana, feed industry – Deputy Agric Minister Dumelo outlines new direction
4 hours -
Agric glut was political, not strategic – Chamber of Agribusiness Ghana boss warns of lost livelihoods
4 hours
