Audio By Carbonatix
The Member of Parliament for Akwatia Constituency, Bernard Bediako Baidoo, has expressed concern over the recent JoyNews Hotline documentary titled “A Tax for Galamsey,” which highlighted alleged illegal taxation of galamsey operations in the Amansie Central District of the Ashanti Region.
In an interview on Nhyira FM’s Kuro Yi Mu Nsem, Mr. Baidoo described the practices as unfortunate, noting that it is disturbing for the district assembly to tax chanfang machines, which have been banned by the government.
“It’s unfortunate because the documentary shows they’re collecting tax on mining equipment, including chanfang machines. We all know the government has banned chanfang machines, so why are they collecting tax on something that’s been banned?” he told host Barima Kofi Dawson.
The MP welcomed the government’s decision to investigate the exposé following a petition to the President, saying it shows that President Mahama’s reset agenda is yielding results.
“We should commend President Mahama for quickly ordering the sector minister to investigate the Galamsey exposé. Similar cases have surfaced before, but nothing was done, so this demonstrates that the reset agenda is on course, and Mahama is a savior of this country,” he said.
Mr. Baidoo expressed confidence that President Mahama will hold anyone found guilty accountable, highlighting the President’s consistent warnings to appointees against involvement in such acts.
“President Mahama has consistently warned his appointees against involvement in such practices, making it clear that no one will be protected if implicated,” he said.
He stressed that the matter should not be politicized and called for the investigation to cover the entire Assembly management, not just the District Chief Executive (DCE).
“In the documentary, it was revealed that the money collected from these miners went into the Assembly’s account, so it’s not the DCE using his own task force to collect and keep the money for himself,” he added.
Mr. Baidoo commended JoyNews for the investigative work, noting that exposing such issues draws government attention and prompts necessary actions and reforms to address the problems.
Latest Stories
-
I didn’t take any government land as Interior Minister—Henry Quartey
46 seconds -
I feel sorry for Muntaka over recruitment pressure – Henry Quartey
8 minutes -
The Copper Nano-Remediation Strategy: Evaluating the risks for Ghana’s galamsey-impacted rivers
19 minutes -
Africa Policy Lens demands answers from Bank of Ghana over sale of nearly 20 tonnes of gold reserves
47 minutes -
Oil above $100 could trigger fuel price shocks in Ghana and West Africa as market transparency gaps persist
51 minutes -
‘One million coders’ approach lacks strategy for jobs – Franklin Cudjoe
58 minutes -
Decades of ‘lip service’ to private sector hurting job creation – Franklin Cudjoe
1 hour -
High oil prices may benefit West African crude exporters but not consumers, Argus analyst says
1 hour -
‘National security time bomb’ looming as youth unemployment surges – Franklin Cudjoe warns
1 hour -
IEA agrees record 400 million barrel oil release as war drives crude volatility
1 hour -
Embassy of Ghana in Rome celebrates 69 years of Ghana’s Independence
1 hour -
Telecel Ghana to train 100,000 youths for free under One Million Coders programme – CEO
2 hours -
NYA CEO Osman Ayariga calls on Wode Maya to mentor youth in content creation at iYES 2026
2 hours -
Crude oil price to average $70 per barrel in 2026 if… – Fitch
2 hours -
Telecel Ghana promises enhanced service following operational upgrade
2 hours
