Audio By Carbonatix
The General Secretary of the Ghana National Association of Small-Scale Miners, Godwin Armah is appealing to the government not to generalise the ban on mining activities in Ghana.
According to him, not all miners contribute to the destruction of the environment, especially small-scale miners.
In an interview with Nana Kwadwo Jantuah on Nhyira FM’s “Kuro yi mu nsem” show, he revealed that small-scale miners have gone through the right processes to acquire their permits and do not practice illegal mining which is currently a threat to the country's ecosystem.
"Most small-scale miners dig boreholes for their work and don't destroy water bodies," he stated.
Mr. Armah believes the destruction of lands and water bodies are due to the illegal miners and large-scale mining in the forest reserves.
He explained there are no laws in Ghana that give small-scale miners the right to enter forest reserves.
“The laws concerning mining, that is the Minerals and Mining Act do not allow any small-scale miner to obtain license to mine in forest reserves. All licenses for mining in forest reserves are given to large-scale miners,” he said.
He added, “the laws say we can’t manage the forest reserves well so they don’t allow us. All the mining companies in the forest reserves are large-scale. Small-scale land should not be more than 25 acres”.
Godwin Armah stated that there are blocked-out areas for small-scale miners after going through the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA), the Minerals Commission gives the license and the sector Minister signs.
“They don’t give prospecting license for small-scale mining. After doing the EIA, they map out the blocked-out areas, then the miners go and apply for their permits at the District Lands Commission to get their EPA, digging permit and water resource before you can proceed,” he said.
The General Secretary of the National Association of Miners also expressed concern about the destruction of land and water bodies.
“Looking at the way our rivers and lands are being destroyed, we the miners are also concerned a lot about the situation. It is appalling,” he bemoaned.
He hopes a solution is found soon without banning small-scale mining.
Latest Stories
-
DVLA launches rollout of new number plates in Oti region
2 minutes -
Ghana Water takes defaulters in Eastern region to court over GHC32 million debt
2 minutes -
Advancing Ghana’s Public Health Act: Multi-Sector Wins Through Harm Reduction
7 minutes -
Economist Godfred Bokpin slams Ghana’s ‘talk show country’ mentality
10 minutes -
GTEC rolls out firm measures to curb misuse of honorary titles
20 minutes -
Bond market: Turnover rose by 54% to GH¢2.47bn
22 minutes -
BoG engages media on digital credit services
37 minutes -
Police frustrated as US woman who alleged kidnapping deletes video, blocks investigators
38 minutes -
Police launch probe into viral kidnapping claim by American woman who has since left Ghana
50 minutes -
Police seek diplomatic help to contact US woman who alleged kidnapping by masked officers
1 hour -
Police arrest four students over Wa Technical Institute riot
1 hour -
GACC urges stronger youth action in Ghana’s fight against corruption
1 hour -
Ghanaian journalists trained on cross-media collaboration at SputnikPro seminar
1 hour -
GTA and GoldBod offer visitors Gold as part of December festivities
1 hour -
Ghanaian journalists trained on cross-media collaboration at SputnikPro seminar
2 hours
