Audio By Carbonatix
Deputy Speaker of Parliament has courted the anger of some members of the house with his controversial shoot-to-kill advocacy against illegal miners.
Member of Parliament for Tamale Central, Inusah Fuseini said the remark by Joe Osei Owusu was not only reckless but a dent on the reputation of Parliament.
While the Deputy Speaker was entitled to his opinion, Mr Fuseini said the floor of Parliament was a completely wrong platform for a statement like that to be made by a person of such high standing.
“I think the statement was very reckless to be made on the floor of the House. The first Deputy Speaker is entitled to his own views. He could make it on other platforms but not whilst sitting in the seat as the First Deputy Speaker in Parliament.
“The very core of our existence as Parliament is to make laws for the smooth administration of this country. We are the champions or the bastions of the protection of the liberties and freedoms of this country,” he said.

Inusah Fuseini
He added the most prudent thing for the Deputy Speaker to have done was to call the minister and demand for the repeal of the current mining law; advocate for a stiffer punishment, including the death penalty for illegal miners if it is the case that the current mining law is not deterrent enough.
Shoot-to-kill policy
The Deputy Speaker who was livid with the wanton destruction of the environment by illegal miners advocated for a stiffer punishment, including the power for the military to shoot on sight persons found to be engaging in illegal mining.
He was commenting on a statement by Kumbungu MP Ras Mubarak who, on the floor of Parliament, protested the burning of 14 trucks and excavators used for sand winning close to the Dalun river in Tamale in the Northern Region.
The sand winners were said to have polluted the Dalun river which served as a major source of water for the people in Tamale.

One of the trucks burns in Tamale
The burning of the trucks and excavators by the military was a drastic measure taken to stop the illegal miners from going ahead with their activity.
But the Minority in Parliament said the action by the government is illegal. It is asking for compensation to be paid to the illegal miners.
In what appears to be a defence of the action by the Military, the Deputy Speaker said stiffer punishment must be imposed on illegal miners.
He said if he had his own way, he would call for a law that will allow the military to shoot and kill persons found to be engaging in illegal mining.
Latest Stories
-
Pesa boosts creativity among youth through art competition at Great Mission Rehab centre
51 seconds -
Government commends 3Farmate’s Ghana-made autonomous farming robot for modernized farming
6 minutes -
Oyster Agribusiness rewards top growers, scales support across Bono East
7 minutes -
GNFS identifies 5 major causes of fire outbreaks as incidents decline in Q1 2026
11 minutes -
Deputy Health Minister Ayensu-Danquah appointed to AU Secretariat on global health
11 minutes -
Creativity is from life and is still very alive…
15 minutes -
Email Marketing in 2026: Why you’re probably doing it wrong
24 minutes -
GCMC flags safety risks as 30% of gas cylinders Fail inspection under recirculation model
33 minutes -
EU-funded Training Centre in Ahafo left to rot four years after commissioning
50 minutes -
Blackrock owner warns of ‘crippling’ electricity bills as Keta–Anloga businesses struggle
58 minutes -
Volta Immigration commander urges border communities’ support as IMMILAC launches in Volta region
1 hour -
Beverly View Plus Hotel drives tourism growth along Keta–Anloga coast; operators seek tax relief
1 hour -
Kumasi stakeholders call for urgent action on air pollution amid data gaps
1 hour -
Former CAF General Secretary Mosengo-Omba files nomination to contest DR Congo FA presidency
1 hour -
Agave-Lakpo kingmakers destool Afevime Gate Sub Chief over insubordination
2 hours