ACEES to Gov’t: Scrap Inter-Ministerial Committee on Illegal Mining in Ghana  

Deputy Executive Director of ACEES, Gideon Ofosu-Peasah

Accra, February 28, 2020: The Africa Centre for Energy and Environmental Sustainability (ACEES) has called on the government to scrap the Inter-Ministerial Committee on Illegal Mining (IMCIM) and rather resource the Minerals Commission and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to perform their regulatory roles.

This is contained in a statement issued by the Deputy Executive Director of ACEES, Gideon Ofosu-Peasah and copied to African Eye Report.

“It must be emphasized that the use of armed security in the fight against illegal mining anywhere in the world particularly Congo and Peru has failed.

Evidence suggests that armed security personnel either get caught up in mining operations themselves, receive bribes, perpetrate human rights violations and have resulted in the loss of lives in some instances”, the statement said.

As a country, they have had a history of failed attempts in the use of military interventions from 1980 to date; a clear evidence that the use of security in fighting illegal mining is untenable and costly. The issue of artisanal and small scale mining is a “bread and butter issue” and as such much be approached with tact.

At a point in time in the fight against illegal mining, informal miners changed their modus operandi to the night due to the inability of the military to provide 24-hour surveillance considering the landmass they were to cover and the lack of appropriate accoutrement.

While Operation Vanguard operated during the day, informal miners worked during the night. Our work as a Centre confirm that often times, Informal miners station key informants at vantage points to notify miners on the inrush of the military.

ACEES therefore recommended that provisionally withdraw any form of state security force to informal mine sites.

It also encouraged the state to incentivize informal miners to obtain legal status by removing barriers to formalization. These barriers include huge costs in obtaining legal status, delays in the permitting process, difficulty in assessing capital, lack of appropriate technology just to mention but a few.

The CSO also suggested the leverage the use of Geographic Information System (GIS) and Artificial Intelligence (AI) including Metal Detection Technologies (MDTs) to actively monitor environmental impacts rehabilitated sites, match patterns, analyse and better predict where to find minerals as used in the Australian small scale mining sector.

Implement the Multi-Sectoral Mining Integrated Project (MMIP) Appraisal and Implementation Document-the five year strategy that presents an integrated project management approach for achieving overall project outcomes, deliverables and collaboration with key stakeholders to sanitize the Galamsey menace, ACEES added.

“We commend the government on the community mining concept and recommend a scale-up, as such deliberate approaches to  formalising the Artisanal and Small Scale Mining sector is key to correcting the nation’s trade balance, providing jobs, revenue, promoting local social and economic development”.

African Eye Report

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