Audio By Carbonatix
Professor of Business and Society and Research Lead at the School of Business and Law, Buckinghamshire New University, UK, has added his voice to the growing calls for urgent government action to address Ghana's illegal mining (galamsey) crisis.
Prof Fred Yamoah urged government to halt new mining concessions and licenses until regulatory gaps in the sector are addressed.
Speaking on JoyNews’ Newsfile on Saturday, October 5, he questioned what government stands to lose if the L. I 2462 is repealed under his watch.

"I understand that you are seeking extra time for discussions with Organised Labour to reach an amicable agreement on their demand.
"But I ask, what would Ghana in your presidency lose if, in the interim, you announce no further concessions and licenses should be approved? Initiate under a certificate of emergency the repeal of that calamitous L.I. 2462 that legally permits mining under the forest reserves, passed under your hand in November 2022, for a reasonable period until this prevailing huge vacuum in the sector is filled?"
The call for immediate action comes as the government faces pressure from Organised Labour, which has threatened to strike on October 10 if no state of emergency is declared to protect the country’s natural resources.

The escalating environmental crisis, fueled by galamsey, has pushed labour groups, environmentalists, and concerned citizens to demand stricter measures.
But government is asking for more time to deliberate on the matter.
He also expressed concern over the silence of political aspirants on the issue, criticizing them for ignoring the looming environmental crisis in their bid for power.
He warned that failure to act now could lead to irreparable damage to Ghana's environment and resources.
He further warned that political leaders who fail to act now may spend their time in office trying to resuscitate a country devastated by illegal mining.
"Galamsey has days and ways to reach a tipping point, and we have no business folding our arms or planning only to attempt to protect our heritage after elections. You may win power only to inherit a country with an unhealthy human resource that is unfit."
"Let us all remember the good old saying – a stitch in time saves nine, and let us all join efforts to deal with the galamsey menace right away."
Latest Stories
-
The Intelligence We Forgot: Why indigenous and ancestral knowledge is Africa’s missing AI superpower
18 seconds -
The Tongue That Burns the Flag: How Political Insults Are Stealing Ghana’s Future
43 seconds -
Mobile money transactions hits GH¢3trn as digital payments surge – BoG Report
21 minutes -
Retirement Is Not Disposal: Why Ghana Must Keep Using the Wisdom of Retired Teachers
24 minutes -
US applauds Ghana–US cooperation as 9 Ghanaians extradited over cybercrime
44 minutes -
The final mic: A nation pauses as Daddy Lumba takes his bow
57 minutes -
Amin Adam rejects ‘blind loyalty’ claims, says Northern support for Bawumia is based on competence
1 hour -
Ghana Card becomes mandatory for insurance transactions from 2026
1 hour -
December in GH: Beware of ‘I don’t have Cedis borgas’
1 hour -
No $300 daily allowance: GAF explains real UN peacekeeping pay
1 hour -
One dead, another in critical condition after wild bees’ attack
1 hour -
Michael Okyere Baafi hosts 2025 Christmas ‘Shop for Free’ initiative for elderly in New Juaben South
1 hour -
Opoku-Agyemang urges long-term investment to grow Africa’s film and creative economy
1 hour -
Analyzing Bank of Ghana’s $10bn forex intermediation in 2025
1 hour -
LA police investigate ‘apparent homicide’ at Rob Reiner’s home
2 hours
