Audio By Carbonatix
The CEO of the Minerals Commission, Martin Ayisi has disclosed that on Monday, May 1, the small-scale mining task force in Oda arrested three Yemenis in the area.
He said that the Commission has involved the police to undertake the necessary procedures to prosecute the perpetrators.
“Just this Monday, the holiday, the small scale task force and the Minerals Commission office in Oda arrested three Yemenis and then impounded two excavators, which are now parked at the police station."
However, Mr Ayisi further indicated that upon the arrest, the Chief of the area visited the office of the task force and claimed ownership of the mining site that was being used by the Yemenis.
He told the host of Newsfile, Samson Lardey Anyenini, “Then a chief showed up, says, ‘ɛha yɛ medeɛ —this is my site.’
“So quickly, the police arrested them. The locals who were working fled. They've been arrested. We got the authorities involved. I think they've been granted a police inquiry bill.”
Mr Ayisi then emphasised that the fight against galamsey seemed unprogressive because influential people in society were involved in the operation, explaining that if persons such as the chief are not prosecuted and subjected to the full rigours of the law, they will be viewed by citizens as having impunity.
This perception, he pointed out, would make citizens also believe that if they engage in galamsey, they can get away with their crime.
Although he asserted that the penalties and the sanction regimes were punitive, he emphasised that they should be biting to be effective.
Mr Ayisi suggested that if the perpetrators involved in galamsey— especially the influential people— are arrested, they should be publicised and imprisoned so as to deter other citizens from engaging in the act.
“So, for instance, this chief, if he's convicted by the court in Oda and is put in jail and is well publicised … then you are sending a strong signal to everybody that, hey, you can go to jail,” he stressed.
Latest Stories
-
Significant debt vulnerabilities persist despite upgrade to “high risk of debt distress” – World Bank to Ghana
14 minutes -
Atleti survive Barcelona fight-back to reach Champions League semis
25 minutes -
Dembele at the double as PSG knock Liverpool out of Champions League quarters again
30 minutes -
Geospatial intelligence and its impact on infrastructure development – Emmanuel Sampson writes
1 hour -
‘Governance is continuous’ — Abban supports Agenda 111 project continuity
1 hour -
GES defends recruitment, cites data-driven teacher allocation
1 hour -
DJ Ashmen lights up maiden Gomoa Easter Carnival
1 hour -
Unpaid teachers oppose new recruitment amid salary arrears
1 hour -
Ghana to introduce community service sentencing to ease prison overcrowding
1 hour -
Coastal communities appeal to Mahama as WACA project stall deepens crisis
1 hour -
Mahama backs prison reforms, says incarceration should not be wished on enemies
1 hour -
Ex-Dep. Health Minister backs PPP model for Agenda 111
2 hours -
Stakeholders convene to tackle barriers facing women in the informal sector
2 hours -
Ghana Medical Trust Fund strengthens partnerships ahead of rollout
2 hours -
GBfoods Ghana launches the Akyɛdeɛ Sokoo National Consumer promotion
2 hours