
Audio By Carbonatix
President John Dramani Mahama has acknowledged that Ghana’s security forces are overstretched, posing a major challenge in the fight against illegal mining, popularly known as galamsey.
Speaking at a recent meeting with Civil Society Organisations (CSOs), the President explained that troops are deployed nationwide to handle multiple security issues, including chieftaincy disputes, land conflicts, and border protection against terrorism.
“We have so many chieftaincy disputes all over the country, land disputes. You go to Sampa, we have troops there; you go to Gonja land, Savannah, there are troops there; you go to Bawku, there are troops there; you go to Nkwanta, our troops are there; and then our troops are also on the border to protect us from terrorism, and so they are spread thin,” he said.
Mr Mahama cautioned that diverting troops to focus solely on forest areas affected by galamsey, without increasing overall numbers, would undermine other critical security roles.
“If you take another batch and you go and put them in our forest, it means that we are committing most of our troops to other things other than crime prevention and keeping us safe,” he added.
He stressed that the fight against illegal mining is being coordinated through the National Inter-Agency Task Force on Illegal Mining (NAIMOS), which pools personnel from the police, army, national security, and other agencies.
“That is why NAIMOS is a combination of the police and the army, so all of them contribute troops, and we also have national security contributing, and all the other agencies,” the President explained. Mr Mahama also expressed optimism that more troops would soon strengthen the anti-galamsey forces, citing the drawdown of peacekeeping missions abroad.
“Happily, we have some additional troops coming with the winding down of some of the peacekeeping theatres, and so when they come, as many of them as possible, we will add them to the force so that we are able to dominate all the anti-galamsey sites and even to win the battle,” he said.
Latest Stories
-
Liverpool reject £21.7m Inter Milan offer for Jones
12 minutes -
Ten-man Belgium held by Iran in second World Cup draw
22 minutes -
Doku criticised over plan to return home for birth
33 minutes -
Lamine Yamal shows why this could be his World Cup
42 minutes -
Serena Williams to make singles comeback at Wimbledon
53 minutes -
Meloni tells Trump to ‘focus on your own popularity’ as row escalates
1 hour -
World Cup still waits for real Brazil to show up
1 hour -
Mahama jokes about Father’s Day gifts, compares bouquet haul to First Lady’s Mother’s Day surprise
1 hour -
NCPTA backs ban on extravagant school graduations, calls for return to discipline, character building
2 hours -
Ghana ranked 1st in Africa with highest policy rate; cost of credit most expensive
2 hours -
Central Regional NADMO gives residents in dilapidated buildings 14 days to evacuate
2 hours -
Bibiani NPP members call for regional chairman’s resignation over disqualification of aspirants
2 hours -
Cloudy conditions, intermittent rains to persist nationwide – GMet
2 hours -
Zenith SME Business Empowerment Lab urges SMEs to adapt, innovate and thrive in a changing economy
3 hours -
T-bills: Government record 20% undersubscription; interest rates continue to rise
3 hours