Audio By Carbonatix
The Chairman of the Kumasi Presbytery of the Global Evangelical Church has asked the government to admit its failure in the fight against illegal mining.
Rev. Dr. Smith Francis Korbla Tettey says evidence available to Ghanaians in the form of destruction of the environment, including water bodies does not support the claim that the Nana Addo-led government is on course to fight the illegal mining menace.
“They are not on course. They should prove to Ghanaians. Look at the rivers; the colour of the waters. If they are on course, they should prove to Ghanaians,” he said.
The government has launched several campaigns to fight illegal mining operations which have degraded several hectares of virgin lands and forests and destroyed water bodies.
Operation Vanguard, Operation Halt and Galamstop are just a few of military-police teams tasked to end the menace.
This was after President Akufo-Addo promised to put his Presidency on the line to end galamsey.
But years into the campaigns, water bodies such as Pra, Offin, Ankobra and Tano are turning murkier every day.
A report by former Minister of Environment, Prof Frimpong Boateng, detailing the involvement of high-level government activists in illegal mining has been countered by the government.
But speaking at the ongoing Kumasi Presbytery Representative Conference of the Global Evangelical Church, Rev. Dr. Smith Francis Korbla Tettey chastised the government for pretending to solve the galamsey menace.
“If you tell us that you are on top of solving a problem and the problem is all over - our cocoa farms have been destroyed by this galamsey thing. If they are on top of it, we should see changes but we are not seeing any change. The situation is worsening day-in, day-out. I doubt what they are saying. It is just a political talk”.

Rev. Dr. Smith Francis Korbla Tettey
For Reverend Dr. Tettey, Ghanaians are already aware of the devastating effects of illegal mining found in water bodies and devastated lands.
“They are not solving the problem. They are only pretending they are solving it.”
Speaking on responsible citizenship, Rev. Tettey observed the lack of a sense of responsibility among Ghanaians, including some ministers of the gospel which has led to the destruction of the environment, and created dishonest leadership.
Latest Stories
-
Host communities in Tarkwa appeal to gov’t to renew Gold Fields contract
3 minutes -
Annual disaster: Resolving accra’s flooding crisis
12 minutes -
Serena Williams, 44, to return to action in Queen’s doubles
14 minutes -
Upcoming NPP Primary: Asante Akyem South Youth urge Eric Amofa to contest
17 minutes -
Keegan reveals stage four cancer diagnosis
19 minutes -
TOR posts GHS 1.24bn profit in 2025 as SIGA hails ‘historic’ financial turnaround
20 minutes -
Record-holder Milner retires after 24-year career
22 minutes -
I leave Liverpool exactly where it belongs – Slot
27 minutes -
Remand order against me ‘surprising, bad but not political’ – Abronye
30 minutes -
Abusive passengers could be blacklisted from all airlines under new proposal
42 minutes -
Fancy Gadam, Rudeboy draw massive crowd at Tamale concert
43 minutes -
Myres Odonkor Junior claims GH¢100K as 1v1 Africa brings football fever to Accra
45 minutes -
Motorists urged to demand ECOWAS Brown Card insurance certificates
45 minutes -
Chairman Big Aidoo donates 100 desks to Humjibre School to improve learning conditions
47 minutes -
Ghanaians weren’t told the full truth – Minority accuses NDC of misleading public on Family Values Bill
50 minutes