Tag: Mining

  • Galamsey: Christian bodies to lead fight, starts with red armband on Sunday October 23

    Churches in Ghana will wear red banners on Sunday, October 23, 2022, to register their displeasure over the devastating effects of illegal mining, known as galamsey.

    The move, according to them, is part of their planned demonstration against the government and other authorities mandated to halt illegal mining but have failed to do so.

    President of the Ghana Pentecostal and Charismatic Council, Rev. Prof. Paul Frimpong-Manso, speaking on Kumasi-based OTEC 102.9 FM’s breakfast show, “Nyansapo” on Thursday, October 20, 2022, said they would mobilize its members to embark on a massive protest to drum home their displeasure over the devastation caused by illegal mining.

    “The government and authorities in charge of regulating these mining activities have consistently failed the country, and so the church is now ready to lead the fight.”

    “We are leading the fight; the fight is in four phases. First, accepting our challenges and weaknesses, pledging that we won’t be part of it, telling the people that it is wrong [to engage in galamsey,” he told the programme’s host, Captain Koda.

    Prof Frimpong Manso, however, disclosed that the churches would soon come out with a specific date to stage the biggest-ever demonstration against illegal mining across the country.

    “On Sunday, all our churches will hoist red flags; the members will put red banners on their hands, heads, and any part of their bodies to show how unhappy the church is over the menace of galamsey.”

     

  • Prosecution of illegal mining cases in the Eastern Region: 187 ‘galamsayers’ jailed since 2017

    A total of 187 persons charged with different mining offences have been convicted and sentenced to various terms of imprisonment in the Eastern Region since 2017.

    They include 29 Nigeriens, seven Nigerians and three Chinese.

    The Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Mr Godfred Yeboah Dame told journalists that prosecution was conducted by the Eastern Region Office of the Attorney-General headed by Chief State Attorney, Mrs Emily Addo-Okyireh.

    Mr Dame said since the designation of the High Court 3 and Circuit Court B, in Koforidua as courts to deal with illegal mining cases by the Chief Justice, Justice Kwasi Anin Yeboah, the Office of the Attorney-General prosecuted all cases on illegal mining brought to its attention.

    He said most of the cases were tried in Circuit Court B, Koforidua presided over by Mrs Mercy Adei-Kotey, now a Justice of the High Court.

    The Attorney General said that most of the accused were tried and sentenced under the old section 99 of the Minerals and Mining Act, 2006 (Act 703).

    The Section 99(1) of Act 703 prescribed a penalty of a minimum fine of three thousand penalty units or imprisonment for a term of not more than five years for the offence of buying or selling minerals without a licence.

    For the offence of undertaking a small scale mining operation without a licence or acting in contravention of a provision of Act 703 in respect of which an offence is created, section 99(2) of Act 703 stipulated a penalty of a minimum fine of one thousand penalty units or to imprisonment for a term not more than three years.

    Mr Dame said in spite of that provision, prosecutors succeeded in getting custodial sentences imposed on the accused in 40 out of the 48 cases being prosecuted, with the court exercising discretion to impose a fine in eight of the cases.

    Under the new law, Mr Dame noted that 33 of the convicted persons including 11 foreigners were convicted and sentenced under the new Minerals and Mining (Amendment) Act, 2019 (Act 995) between August 2021 and September 2022 and are currently serving various prison terms of 15 years, 20 years and 18 years together with fines imposed in the various cases in which they were convicted.

    Mr Dame, however, expressed displeasure with the decision of the Circuit Court to impose sentences between three years and five years on the accused in five of the cases involving the trial of 47 persons, which were filed before the passage of Act 995 but which were determined after the Act had come into force on August, 19, 2019,

    This, he said, was contrary to the law as Act 995 substituted the punishment regime provided for under Act 703 with a new punishment regime which increased the penalty for engaging in illegal mining operations and illegal trading in minerals.

    In the view of the Attorney-General, the substitution of the former section 99 of Act 703 with a new section 99 under Act 995 implied that a court of law engaged with the conduct of a case pending before it, was obliged to apply the new penalties provided for by the law rather than applying the old penalties existing under the law which was no longer in force.

    The Attorney-General indicated that of the 48 cases tried in the Eastern Region since 2017, in respect of which convictions have been secured, only one is on appeal.

    He said that there were currently about 43 new cases involving the trial of about 250 persons including Chinese at Circuit Court B, Koforidua.

    The Attorney-General said an update on the prosecution of illegal mining cases in other regions, particularly, Ashanti, Western and Greater-Accra Regions will be provided in due course.

  • Assistant headmaster of Mpatasie JHS dies in galamsey pit

    A 47-year-old Assistant Headmaster of Mpatasie D/A Junior High School in the Amansie South District of the Ashanti Region has died after he fell into a mining pit.

    Officials say Akwasi Anane had embarked on a routine trip to his mining concession at about 9 p.m., on Tuesday (October 4) when the incident occurred.

    The deceased reportedly missed his step and fell into one of the abandoned mining pits. His body was immediately pulled out of the mud after a rescue mission.

    He was however confirmed dead at the scene. A District Coordinator for the National Disaster Management Organization for Amansie South Edward Oduro Nsiah confirmed the development to dailymailgh.com.

    “He is a teacher and he also has a concession so he went to the site very late. He stood on top of the pit and in an attempt to make a step he slipped and fell into the pit. His body has been deposited at the St. Martin’s Hospital at Agroyesum,” Nsiah said.

    “The fight against galamsey is not paying off. For instance when you come to Amansie South nearly 80 percent of the indigenes are into illegal mining. In the last two months, we have lost at least six lives at separate locations and that is very worrying,” he added.

    The Minister of Lands and Natural Resources who has already visited the mining sites at the Amansie South enclave is still amazed at the level of destruction caused to the environment by illegal miners and said the government will continue to deploy the military to clamp down on such activities.

    “It should baffle all of us as citizens and policymakers and stakeholders in this fight how an operation like this in the heart of the forest and the far away areas of our country can go on without notice by police, chiefs, the local political leadership, assembly people, the District Chief Executive and even the inspectorate division of the minerals commission here,” Mr. Jinapor said.

     

     

  • President’s speech did not offer any new direction in fighting galamsey – Daryl Bosu

    Deputy National Director of Arocha Ghana, an environmental non-governmental organization, Daryl Bosu says President Akufo-Addo’s statement during a meeting with the National House of Chiefs to discuss effects of the ‘galamsey’ menace offers no new direction for the fight against the menace.

    President Akufo-Addo on Wednesday met members of the National House of Chiefs on illegal mining.

    The President stood by his declaration to put his presidency on the line in the fight against illegal mining popularly known as ‘galamsey’. He also implored the chiefs to take out any partisanship interests in the fight against the menace.

    The President noted that the battle is nowhere near being won despite all the efforts he and his government has put into fighting it.

    “We have tried many initiatives, including that of the Community Mining Scheme, and the establishment of a new legal regime for dealing with the perpetrators of this phenomenon, which has imposed severe sanctions on those Ghanaians and foreigners convicted of illegal mining. Still, we have not won the fight,” he said.

    Reacting to these comments, Mr. Bosu said President Akufo-Addo’s statement offered no home.

    “I must say that I struggle to really get any new action from what the President said. I listened to what the President was saying and it takes us back to 2017, most of it. Frankly, I am struggling unless maybe coming from the closed door meetings, we are going to see some more pragmatic action to address these menace but until then I did not really get anything new…there is nothing new for us here,” he said on JoyNews’ The Pulse on Wednesday, October 5, 2022.

    According to him, the President’s comment rather gives the notion that government admits to its failure in the fight against the canker.

    “I think what we are getting from the President is his admission that the fight against ‘galamsey’ has failed…for me, I feel it is going over the same issue over and over again without anything new,” he told Blessed Sogah.

  • Illegal miners don’t pay tax strengthen mining regulations – Joe Wise to gov’t

    The first Deputy Speaker, Joseph Osei-Owusu has said the government should strengthen regulations in the mining sector to prevent those engaging in it wrongly.

    Speaking in an exclusive interview on GHOne TV with Serwaa Amihere, the deputy speaker indicated that the government must not incur cost in an area he is not getting anything from.

    According to him, mining per se is not the challenge but mining irresponsibly is the issue, adding that they are not protecting the water bodies.

    “Mining has gone on but in a very irresponsible and so regulations should be harder. But the point is that with all the people making the money the government does not even get a portion. So why should the government continue to hire more people and spend it there?

    “Already you are overburdened and the people who are destroying the environment are not putting it back. If there is a way you can get some revenue from them that’s fine. But, one, he is stealing and he doesn’t have a license either. No account for anything revenue he gets and yet you are to add to your cost?” the MP quizzed.

    He has however absorbed the government from the responsibility of creating jobs.

    According to him, the government’s responsibility is to create an enabling environment for businesses to strive.

    The lawmaker also described as outmoded the expectation from people blaming the responsibility of job creation solely on the government.

    “The time that the government took the responsibility for creating jobs is long gone. The government’s position is that I will provide the enabling environment for you to create the job for yourselves.

    “So we should stop placing responsibility where you should not. A lot of the time we make people feel that it is the government’s duty to do this and that and people don’t do what they can do for themselves,” he explained.

    Mr. Osei-Owusu added that he is leaving politics and therefore can voice out, “I will speak boldly on what matters. If we want to move forward people must take responsibility for their lives.”

  • I’m the complainant behind most galamsey cases in Ellembelle – DCE

    Kwasi Bonzoh, the District Chief Executive of Ellembelle has said that his dedication to the fight against illegal mining has seen him gone up against illegal miners in court.

    Bonzoh K as he is fondly called, said on Adom FM that he is the complainant in most of the illegal mining cases being prosecuted in the Ellembelle district.

    He recounted instances where he testified in open court against illegal miners and emphasize his commitment to the fight.

    Bonzoh K also noted that but for the drive and dedication of the Akufo-Addo government, the Ellembelle district would have been ravaged by illegal mining activities.

    Whiles commending the president for the fight against galamsey, Bonzoh K reaffirmed his willingness to protect the resources.

    “Let me commend the president. But for his intervention and commitment to fighting illegal mining, things would have been worse. There is gold in Ellembele but instead of going through due process they normally circumvent the process by seeing the families who are owners of the land. Because it’s illegal, you can’t regulate them.

    “Nana Akufo-Addo’s fight is what has brought us some relief. There are about 18 operations and I’m the complainant for most of them. There are instances where I’ve testified in open court against galamseyers” he said.

    Bonzoh K also called for a de-politicization of the fight against galamsey. He surmised that giving the fight a political colorization will prevent the government and agencies from identifying the real culprits behind the menace.

    “Galamseyers are businessmen who take advantage of the political space. We should do this thing [fighting illegal mining] without the political colorization of the fight”.

    “When you arrest one galamseyer, the number of calls that you will receive transcends political lines. The moment you politicize it, the real actors get away with it. We are doing the unborn generations a great disservice if we don’t win this fight. If we just look on for people to just destroy our environment, what will my children come to inherit?”

    Bonzoh K has been charged with five counts of alleged obstruction over the controversial missing excavators saga.

    The charges he will face are assault, conspiracy to assault, resisting arrest and two others.

    He has pleaded not guilty to all charges and is currently on a bail.

  • We are joking about galamsey fight – Dr. Lawrence Tetteh

    A well-known evangelist, Rev. Dr. Lawrence Tetteh, has called Ghana’s battle against unlawful small-scale mining, better known as galamsey, a joke given how pretentiously everyone has been handling it.

    He asserted that the persons involved in the trade are not hiding anything, and that the rules of the nation are freely flouted by them.

    In a brief excerpt from the Ghana Broadcasting Corporation‘s Breakfast Show, Rev. Dr. Lawrence Tetteh spoke about how he had seen firsthand the extent of the environmental harm that galamsey has inflicted.

    “I have had the chance to go to Tarkwa, with my team as a form of excursion and curiosity, got to see galamsey sites. We advanced to see some in Obuasi and I think it’s a joke if we make talks that we’re fighting galamsey,” he said.

    The revered Man of God went on to say that although national authorities are aware of the origins of galamsey and the reasons it has grown to be such an empowered sector, they are choosing not to address it directly.

    “Everybody knows where galamsey is. Everybody knows the perpetrators… how does the equipment get to Ghana? The equipment don’t fly straight from China. The equipment don’t fly straight from Japan. The equipment don’t come straight from other parts straight; it goes through our ports of entry. Who monitors them?

    “I think that it’s about time as a nation, we walk the talk and stop limiting ourselves to very trivial things. Galamsey is destroying our water bodies, it has destroyed our nation,” he added.

    The  Akufo-Addo government has been on a relentless campaign to completely stop galamsey in the country but it has continuously been met with many challenges.

  • Armed robbers steal gold worth US$350,000 from mining company

    On June 10, 2022, armed robbers raided the premises of a gold ore mining company making away with an unspecified amount of gold.

    The affected company, GoldStone Resources Limited near Akrokeri in the Ashanti region, has now confirmed the value of the gold the robbers bolted with.

    They made away with approximately US$350,000 when they raided the Homase site of the company.

    The company in a June 29 statement said employee was hurt during the incident adding that the loss was not expected to have an impact on the financial performance of the company.

    “The Board can now confirm that an armed robbery took place at its Homase site, which, whilst no one was hurt, resulted in a loss of gold with a value of approximately US$350k,” the statement said.

    “Whilst this loss is not expected to have a material impact on the financial performance of the business, the Company was not in a position to make an announcement that was compliant with the AIM Rules, which led to a suspension in the trading of its ordinary shares on AIM whilst an investigation was launched by the authorities in Ghana,” the statement added.

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • Four missing miners found dead in Burkina Faso

    Rescue workers in Burkina Faso have recovered the bodies of four miners who had gone missing after floodwaters submerged a Canadian-owned zinc mine in Perkoa, in the Sanguié province of the West African country.

    Eight miners were reported trapped in the underground mine on April 16, triggering a 39-day search that offered little hope of finding any survivors.
    Six of the missing miners are Burkina Faso nationals while the other two are from Zambia and Tanzania, according to the Burkinabe ministry of mines.
    “Unfortunately, after 39 days of intense search, the lifeless bodies of four miners were found,” a government statement said Wednesday.
    It did not reveal the nationalities of the recovered bodies.
    The government said search operations will continue until the other four missing miners are found.
    Last week, rescue teams found no survivors in the refuge chamber of the mine, which is stocked with food supplies and located 570 meters underground, deflating hopes that the missing men could be found alive.
    Canadian firm Trevali Mining Corp said in a statement the refuge chamber of its Perkoa mine was “found intact,” indicating that the missing miners hadn’t gotten to it.
    The Canadian mining contractor has opted not to disclose the names of its missing miners, “out of respect for the privacy” of their families and friends, it said.
    For more than a month, families of the miners have congregated around the site, in an agonizing wait for news of their loved ones as officials searched the mine which caved in following a flash flood.
    Many locals had criticized the state emergency services for taking too long to reach the rescue chamber.
    Trevali said rescue operations could only begin after the road leading into the mine, which was washed away by the aggressive flood was rebuilt, including the reinstallation of damaged electrical equipment at the site.
    More than 30 million liters of water have been pumped out of the submerged mine, Trevali stated in an update on search efforts.
    Burkina Faso has had a series of mining disasters. Around 60 people were killed in an explosion at an informal gold mining site in the country’s Poni province in February, local officials said at the time.
    Source: CNN
  • Partner government to clean up Small-Scale mining sector – Lands Minister urges miners

    The Hon. Minister for Lands and Natural Resources, Samuel A.Jinapor, says the government’s resolve to clean up the Small-Scale mining and root out illegalities in the sector is unflinching.

    He said the current clean up exercise in the sector will ensure decent and well-regulated mining for the development of the country.

    The Minister stated this when he addressed the Ghana National Association of Small-Scale miners at Dunkwa-On-Offin at the end of his two-day tour of the Central Region.

    “Our efforts so far is seeing some level of results, adding that you need sustain efforts to get results,” he said.

    The Small-Scale mining sector, according to him, contributed about 40 percent of total gold production out of the country and to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), helping also to boost local economies.

    “We will therefore continue to use broad base support to regulate Small-Scale mining”, Hon. Jinapor said.

    The government, he indicated was not relenting its efforts to root out illegal mining, assuring that the ban on illegal mining was forever.

    He admonished small scale miners to mine rights to attract the needed benefits and asked them to adopt what he described as ” Peer regulation” to help push the sector forward.

    Hon. Jinapor dismissed claims that the government has given up the fight against illegal mining, saying ” we have not given up the fight”.

    He assured Ghanaians that the government was determined to sustain its efforts to curb the menace and promote peace and harmony in the sector.

    Source: Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources

  • Security task force arrests 24 miners, burns mining equipment at Adansi Akrofuom

    A Joint Security Taskforce headed by the District Chief Executive (DCE) for Adansi Akrofuom, Mr Maurice Jonas Woode, has arrested 24 illegal miners operating in the Sukuma Forest reserve at Pewodie near Grumesa in the Adansi Akrofuom District.

    The Miners aged between 14 to 45 were said to have been operating in the middle of the forest for some time now despite the ban on illegal mining and mining in forest areas.

    The task force also destroyed 16 Chanfan machines, over 200 tents and also seized 104 pumping machines and 11 Gold detector machines from the miners.

    It was the second time in two weeks that the Akrofuom DCE had led a raid on illegal miners in the area after a similar exercise at Betenase.

    The DCE told the Ghana News Agency (GNA) in an interview that “we had a tip-off that there has been fracas among illegal miners operating at Pawodie and Betenase. This prompted the District Security Council to map out strategies to arrest them and halt their operations”.

    He announced his resolve to go after illegal miners destroying water bodies and forest areas in the District.

    “We are leaving no stone unturned in clamping down on the activities of these illegal miners. We want these arrests and subsequent burning of mining equipment to serve as a deterrent to others,” the visibly furious DCE stated.

    Chief Superintendent Joseph Nyaaba, Obuasi Divisional Police Commander, said the Security Taskforce was committed to nipping the activities of illegal miners in the bud.

    He promised that such operations will not be a flash in the pan, disclosing that,” 83 Security personnel were involved in this operation. This is an indication of our preparedness to stop the activities of illegal miners”.

    He cautioned illegal miners who had defied the Presidential orders of banning all illegal mining activities, to halt their operations since the Police would not relent in their efforts to go after them.

    Source: GNA

  • 41-year-old man dies in mining pit

    A 41-year-old man, Emmanuel Okyere, popularly called Mensah has died inside a mining pit at Akyem Dokyi in the Kwabibirem Municipal District of the Eastern Region.

    He died on Thursday, 11 March 2021 when he fell into the mining pit, belonging to BSD Company.

    According to an eye witness who is also brother of the deceased, both were engaged in construction work, not far from the mining pit when his brother went to wash down near the pit.

    He was cautioned by some children around the area against washing down near the pit.

    However, he fell deep into the uncovered mining pit before he could move away from it.

    All efforts to save him proved futile.

    The body which has been recovered has been deposited at the St Dominic Hospital at Akwatia awaiting autopsy.

    Source: Class FM

  • Mining and quarrying sub-sector recorded 35.2% PPI in June

    The producer price inflation in the mining and quarrying sub-sector decreased by 7.3 percentage points over the May 2020 rate of 42.5 percent to record 35.2 percent in June 2020, the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) has announced on Wednesday July 2.

    That of the petroleum sub-sector was 1.2 percent in June 2019. Subsequently, the rate increased to record 3.1 percent in August 2019 but declined to -5.7 percent in October 2019.
    Gold prices today fall as traders book profit at higher levels. Thereafter the rate increased consistently to record 20.6 percent in January 2020 but constantly declined to record -15.4 percent in May 2020. However, the rate increased again to record -5.4 percent in June 2020.

    The producer inflation for Manufacturing which constitutes more than two-thirds of the total industry increased by 1.6 percentage points to record 2.7 percent.

    The utility sub-sector recorded an inflation rate of 12.1 percent for June 2020 indicating no change in producer inflation recorded in May 2020.

    During June 2020, nine out of the sixteen major groups in the manufacturing sub-sector recorded inflation rates higher than the sector average of 2.7 percent.

    Manufacture of food products and beverages recorded the highest inflation rate of 8.5 percent, while the Manufacture of coke, refined petroleum products and nuclear fuel recorded the least inflation rate of -4.5 percent.

    The Producer Price Inflation rate for June 2020 was 8.7 percent.

    This rate, according to the GSS, indicates that between June 2019 and June 2020 (year-on-year), the PPI increased by 8.7 percent.

    This rate represents a 0.3 percentage point increase in producer inflation relative to the rate recorded in May 2020 (8.4%).

    The month-on-month change in producer price index between May 2020 and June 2020 was 1.8 percent.

    Source: Laud Business

  • 12 illegal miners nabbed by Inter-Ministerial Committee

    The Monitoring and Evaluation Team of the Inter-Ministerial Committee on Illegal Mining (IMCIM) has intercepted a team of members of the National Small Scale Taskforce Association who were involved in illegal mining activities within the general areas of Obuasi in the Ashanti Region.

    The 11-member illegal mining team, who were dressed in military desert uniforms with combat gears, was led by one Mr. Adoh Briss.

    The illegal miners were intercepted on Wednesday during a routine monitoring and evaluation duties.

    The IMCIM intercepted the team in communities such as Supuma, Supuma Forest Reserve and Kubi, while they were illegally mining.

    The illegal miners were using three vehicles a Toyota Hilux, a Nissan Patrol and a Nissan Hard Body.

    Other items that were found on them were six pump action guns and their luggage.

    IMCIM Monitoring and Evaluation Team, which was led by Staff Sergeant Francis Assibi Abu, therefore ordered Mr. Adoh Briss and his team to seize their operations and report to the Ashanti Regional Headquarters of the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of the Ghana Police Service in Kumasi.

    Within the forest area, the IMCIM chanced on local indigenes who were involved in manual minimal local mining.

    Two excavators were also seen involved in reclamation of altered mined lands.

    Source: 3 News

  • Local mining contractors cry over high permit fees

    The Association of Local Mining Contractors has called for government intervention in the high permit fees being charged by the Minerals Commission on their members.

    According to the Association, the over 500 percent increase in the charges was abnormal and needed the intervention of the government to prevent businesses in the sector from total collapse.

    Members of the Association a year and a half ago were paying GHC5,000.00 as fees for their permits, but this had been astronomically increased to 10,000 United States dollars.

    Mr Samuel Aboagye, Interim Secretary of the Association told a press briefing in Kumasi that, the Minerals Commission had not been able to explain to members of the Association the reason for such an increase.

    What was worrying was the quotation of the fees in dollars, while members of the Association charge their clients in the local cedi currency.

    Mr Kwarteng said the unexplained astronomical increase was having a negative impact on the businesses of the members and called for urgent steps to stop the Commission from implementing it.

    Source: GNA

  • Local mining contractors cry over high permit fees

    The Association of Local Mining Contractors, has called for government intervention in the high permit fees being charged by the Minerals Commission on their members.

    According to the Association, the over 500 per cent increase in the charges was abnormal and needed the intervention of the government to prevent businesses in the sector from total collapse.

    Members of the Association a year and a half ago were paying GHC5,000.00 as fees for their permits, but this had been astronomically increased to 10,000 United States dollars.

    Mr Samuel Aboagye, Interim Secretary of the Association told a press briefing in Kumasi that, the Minerals Commission had not been able to explain to members of the Association the reason for such an increase.

    What was worrying was the quotation of the fees in dollars, while members of the Association charge their clients in the local cedi currency.

    Mr Kwarteng said the unexplained astronomical increase was having a negative impact on the businesses of the members and called for urgent steps to stop the Commission from implementing it.

    Source: GNA

  • Do not grant permit to Shaanxi Mining Company Small Scale miner

    Small Scale Mining Groups at the Gbane Community in the Talensi District of the Upper East Region have appealed to the mining regulatory bodies in the country not grant permit to the Shaanxi Mining Company to venture into large scale mining in the area.

    They said it would be prudent on the part of the mining regulatory bodies, including the Mineral Commission, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Mining Inspectorate Division to do thorough consultations to inform them of the merits and demerits of such a possibility.

    The Small Scale Mining groups, which include the Unique Mining Group and the Nalamtaaba Mining Group, made the call when a Consultant engaged them about the interest expressed by the Shaanxi Mining Company Limited to go into large scale mining in the area.

    The Shaanxi Mining Company Limited, a Chinese Mining Company, entered into partnership with the Yenyaya Mining Group and Pubortaaba Mining Group, two small scale mining groups who had legally acquired their concessions, to provide mining support services to the two small scale mining groups.

    In 2008, Mr Charlse Nadanbon, the Chief Executive Officer of Yenyaya Mining Group, who was selected among small scale mining groups by government to go to China and learn on sustainable mining activities, persuaded and brought the Chinese Mining Company to Ghana, specifically the Gbane community.

    Since then it had been providing mining support services to Yenyaya Mining Group and Pubortaaba Mining Group, until now that it started seeking for a permit to go into large scale mining in the area where the small scale miners are operating.

    Mr Polo Boyark, the Chief Executive Officer of the Nalamtaaba Mining Group, who made the call on behalf of the Small Scale Mining Groups after the engagement with the Consultant, stated that until proper consultation and proper agreement are reached between the Shanxi Mining Company Limited and the Small Scale Mining Groups, the mining regulatory bodies should not grant them permit to mine on their acquired concessions.

    According to the Small Scale Mining Groups, they have all acquired all the necessary mining permits and documents and therefore would not succumb to any powers that would want to circumvent the laws to allow the Shanxi Mining Company Limited to mine on their concessions without the proper engagement and agreement.

    “We will not sit down and allow a foreign mining Company to threaten us on our very livelihoods, which we have been depending on for many years. Unless the proper thing is done by bringing all of us the Small Scale Mining groups to sit down and dialogue with the Shanxi Mining Company Limited,” he said.

    The group who threatened that they would resist any attempt if their demand and interest were not met, called on the Mining regulatory bodies to ensure that their request was followed before the consideration of granting the Shanxi Mining Company Limited to go into large scale mining.

    Source: GNA

  • Dont grant mining permit to Shanzi Mining Company Small-scale miners

    Small-scale mining groups at the Gbane Community in the Talensi District of the Upper East Region have appealed to the Minerals Commission, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Mining and Inspectorate Division not to grant a permit to Shanxi Mining Company Limited (SMCL) to go into large-scale mining in the area.

    The Shanxi Mining Company Limited which was providing mining support service to Yenyaya Mining Group and Pubortaaba Mining Group are seeking permit to go into large-scale mining in the area where the small-scale miners are operating.

    The small-scale mining groups, which include the Unique Mining Group and the Nalamtaaba Mining Group, made the call when a consultant engaged them about the interest expressed by the Shanxi Mining Company Limited to go into large-scale mining in the area.

    The Chief Executive Officer of the Nalamtaaba Mining Group, Mr Polo Boyark, who made the call on behalf of the small-scale mining groups on Saturday, after the engagement with the consultant, stated that until proper consultation and proper agreement were reached between the Shanxi Mining Company Limited and the small-scale mining groups, the mining regulatory bodies should not grant permit to SMCL to mine on their concessions.

    According to the small-scale mining groups they had all acquired the necessary mining permits and therefore would not succumb to any powers that would want to circumvent the laws to allow the Shanxi Mining Company Limited to mine on their concessions without the proper engagement and agreement.

    “We will not sit down and allow a foreign mining company to threaten our very livelihoods which we have been depending on for very long years. Unless the proper thing is done, by bringing all of us the small-scale mining groups to sit down and dialogue with the Shanxi Mining Company Limited.”

    The group, who threatened that they would resist any attempt if their demand and interest were not met, called on the mining regulatory bodies to ensure that their request were followed before the consideration of granting the Shanxi Mining Company Limited to go into large scale mining.

    The Shanxi Mining Company Limited entered into a partnership with the Yenyaya Mining Group and Pubortaaba Mining Group who had legally acquired their concessions to provide mining support service to the two small-scale mining groups.

    The Chief Executive Officer of Yenyaya Mining Group, Mr Charles Nadanbon was selected among small-scale mining groups by the government in 2008 to go to China and learn on sustainable mining activities that persuaded and brought the Chinese Mining Company to Ghana, specifically the Gbane community.

    The company has been providing mining support services to these small-scale mining groups until recently when the company expressed interest to go into large-scale mining, hence the consultant engaging the small-scale mining groups at Gbane.

    Source: Ghanaian Times

  • Be responsible in your activities – Justice Akrowia to small scale miners

    Justice Kofi Akrowia, the Supervising High Court Judge in Kumasi, has charged small scale miners to be responsible in their activities to help save the environment.

    He said small scale mining contributed significantly to national development and there was the need for industry players to ensure that their activities were properly done to protect the environment, and also sustain the future of the industry.

    Justice Akrowia made the call after swearing into office the new executive members of the Ghana National Association of Small Scale Miners (GNASSM) at a ceremony in Kumasi.

    The new executive had Mr Philip Akwasi Akuffo as President, with Mr Sampson Kofi Wiredu, Vice President and Godwin Nickleson Armah, as General Secretary.

    Others were; Alhaji Baba Ahmed National Orgnaizer, Razak Abdul Alhassan Director of Communication, Janet Esi Kusi National Treasurer and Francis Opoku National Director of Finance.

    The rest were; Joseph Blankson Aidoo Techinical Director and Victoria Adobea Guerrieri, National Women Coordinator.

    Justice Akrowia urged the leadership of the Association to ensure that their members complied with the law guiding their operations and stay within it at all times.

    Mr Philip Akwasi Akuffo, the new President pledged to work to change the fortunes of the Association by working hard to stem out illegal mining activities in the country.

    He said the activities of illegal miners were tarnishing the image of small scale miners who were doing lawful and properly regulated activity and they would go all out to fish out such person for the law to deal with them.

    Mr Akuffo appealed to the government to help members acquire washing machines and excavators to carry out their work.

    Source: GNA

  • Mining drives Producer Inflation in May 2020

    For a second straight month, the mining and quarrying sub-sector has been the lead driver of producer inflation, as the index in the month of May 2020 recorded an increase to 8.4 percent, data from the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) has shown.

    This rate represents a 1.0 percentage point increase in producer inflation relative to the rate recorded in April 2020 at 7.4 percent.

    During the month, the manufacturing sub-sector, which constitutes more than two-thirds of total industry, also contributed marginally to the increase in the all industry rates.

    The producer price inflation in the Mining and Quarrying sub-sector increased by 4.5 percentage points over its April 2020 rate of 38.0 percent to record 42.5 percent in May 2020, whereas the producer inflation for Manufacturing increased by 0.6 percentage points to record 1.1 percent.

    The Producer Price Index (PPI) measures the average change over time in the prices received by domestic producers for the production of their goods and services.

    Undoubtedly, the continuous increase in demand for gold as a safe haven with regards to value, has been a key contributor to the rates upsurge for May 2020.

    The Government Statistician, Professor Samuel Kobina Annim affirmed this, saying, “The increase in the Mining and Quarrying inflation rate from 38.0 percent in April 2020 to 42.5 percent in May 2020 was as a result of increases in the price of gold in May 2020 and the depreciation of the local currency.”

    Amidst the coronavirus pandemic, the World Gold Council have affirmed that, in the short-term there is risk and uncertainty, where market downturns often boost investment demand for gold as a safe haven asset.

    Further to this, the Council stated that opportunity cost representing the perceived relative value of competing assets including bonds (interest rates) and currencies, influence investor attitudes towards gold. More often than not, three variables capture this theme in the form of the nominal 10-year U.S. Treasury bond yields, a developed market currency index and an emerging market currency index.

    The price of gold on the international market rose from about US$ 1,702.75 per ounce on April 30, 2020 to US$ 1,717 per ounce as at May 28, 2020. The commodity was trading at US$ 1,724.35 per ounce as at June 17, 2020.

    For the Manufacturing sector, the Government Statistician said, “The marginal increase in the manufacturing sector inflation rate from 0.5 percent in April 2020 to 1.1 percent in May 2020 was as a result of increases in an inflation rate for the manufacture of other non-metallic minerals products from 9.9 percent in April 2020 to 12.7 percent in May 2020.”

    Trends

    In May 2019, the producer price inflation rate for all industry was 6.7 percent. The rate then increased consistently to record 10.2 percent in August 2019 but declined to 8.9 percent in October 2019. The rate then increased again continuously to record 14.5 percent in January 2020 but thereafter declined to record 6.8 percent in March 2020. However, the rate increased again to record 8.4 percent in May 2020.

    Source: goldstreetbusiness.com

  • Ghanaians now occupy top positions in mining sector

    Most top positions in the mining sector are now being occupied by Ghanaians, President of the Ghana Chamber of Mines, Eric Asubonteng, has said.

    He noted that out of the total number of direct mine employees, only 1.2 per cent are expatriates while the overwhelming majority remain Ghanaian nationals.

    “Let me state emphatically that gone are the days when expatriates occupied all the key management roles on mine sites. Today, highly skilled Ghanaian mining professionals are occupying key positions at all levels of our industry, much to the satisfaction of our now actively discerning investors and stakeholders.”

    “Interestingly, Ghanaian mining professionals are in high demand on the global market, as many of our colleagues have taken up management roles as expatriates, in both developed and emerging mining destinations across the globe,” he added.

    The mining sector employed 1,790 more people in 2019 increasing the total workforce engaged directly by mining companies to 11,899 compared to 10,109 in 2018, according to the 2019 Annual report of the Chamber of Mines released today, Friday, 29 May 2020.

    Source: laudbusiness.com

  • Mining employed 1,790 people in 2019 Chamber of Mines

    The mining sector employed 1,790 more people in 2019, increasing the total workforce engaged directly by mining companies to 11,899 compared to 10,109 in 2018.

    This was contained in the 2019 Annual report of the Chamber of Mines released today, Friday, 29 May 2020.

    According to the President of the Chamber, Eric Asubonteng, the 18 percent growth in employment was primarily due to additional recruitments at Newmont’s Ahafo Mine, Asanko Gold Ghana Ltd, Golden Star Wassa Ltd and the redeveloped AngloGold Ashanti Obuasi Mine.

    He noted that out of the total number of direct mine employees, only 1.2 percent are expatriates while the overwhelming majority remain Ghanaian nationals.

    “Let me state emphatically that gone are the days when expatriates occupied all the key management roles on mine sites. Today, highly skilled Ghanaian mining professionals are occupying key positions at all levels of our industry, much to the satisfaction of our now actively discerning investors and stakeholders.”

    “Interestingly, Ghanaian mining professionals are in high demand on the global market, as many of our colleagues have taken up management roles as expatriates, in both developed and emerging mining destinations across the globe,” he added.

    Mr Asubonteng noted that although the Chamber is proud of the increase in direct jobs, it is important to recognise that direct jobs created by large-scale mining are but a fraction of the multiplier effect of mining operations on employment.

    The value chain of mining, according to him, creates a huge pool of opportunities that ensure that support service providers such as input suppliers, food producers and vendors as well as social entrepreneurs are able to take advantage of the inherent opportunities to generate sustainable employment.

    He emphasised on the importance of focusing on a well-structured small-scale mining sector for more job creation.

    “We are all aware that thousands of our brothers and sisters are engaged in illegal mining financed by persons who are able to afford heavy machinery that are posing a major risk to our environment. If properly structured, small-scale mining could create many more decent jobs for the teeming youth of our dear nation, who would have the added benefits of pension contribution and plan for their future. It also has the potential to open up a pool of revenue generation streams for the state, if modelled in a worker-friendly manner,” Mr Asubonteng stressed.

    Source: Class FM

  • Invest in mining to sustain economic gains – Small-Scale miners to government

    The Ghana Association of Small-Scale Miners (GASSM), has called on the government to prioritize investment in the sector to help sustain Ghana’s economic gains and shore up revenue in the wake of the COVID-19 outbreak.

    According to the Association, growth in many sectors had slide lately amidst the COVID-19 global devastation, yet the return on investments in the mining sector remained exceptionally high and profitable, hence, the urgent need for government to map out cogent strategic investment interventions to rake in more revenue for development.

    “Government stands to make an astronomical increase in revenue if it takes immediate pragmatic steps to invest in Small-Scale mining to expand their capacities and create more employment opportunities for all.”

    “The prices of Ghana’s major revenue magnets – fuel, cocoa, coffee, timber among others have fallen drastically at the international market, yet, the prices of minerals keep surging, signalling the urgent need for government investment in the sector to rake in the needed revenue for investments,” it said.

    Mr Francis Opoku, the Public Relations Officer of the Association made the call in an interview with the media in Assin Fosu on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the Small-Scale industry in Ghana.

    Beyond direct fiscal receipts, he explained that the sector when fully integrated into the economy through the provision of inputs for other sectors, research and development activities, and technology transfers, could have greater capacity.

    This will contribute to the state of development of major sectors like banking, financial services, transport, logistics, amongst others.

    Mining also contributes to development through the implementation of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) programmes for host Communities and the general public at large and reiterated that in 2011, US$24million was spent on CSR projects by the mining companies.

    According to Mr Opoku, the wave of investments in the sector by mining companies in recent years had boosted production and improved cost efficiency in mining yet, that was not enough to sustain the sector.

    “Investment in the sector is huge, which required strategic investment and partnership aided by the right business regulatory regimes to flourish the sector,” he said.

    Nonetheless, Mr Opoku praised the government for its firm commitment to improving the industry regulation, tackling long-term issues of illegal activity, known as “galamsey”, correct environmental damage and strengthening capacity.

    He was also grateful to the government for lifting the ban on small-scale mining operations after nearly two years.

    The ban, according to him, was originally imposed due to the proliferation of illegal mining activity over the past decade, which was causing serious environmental damage, raising tensions with local communities, posing serious health and safety threats, as well as the loss of revenue by the nation.

    Mr Opoku observed that while the ban was somewhat controversial in the long term, many in the industry saw it as an opportunity to reboot and legitimise the small-scale mining segment after an extensive process of vetting and re-vetting miners and concessions before licenses were issued under a new framework for small-scale mining.

    Outlining other measures to sustain the sector, the Public Relations Officer of the Association stressed the need for credit facilities to be made accessible to the members to sustain their trade and livelihood.

    He called on the government to systematically design areas to be licensed to small-scale miners and provide documents showing areas and maps to facilitate accessibility.

    He was not happy about the fact that regularisation within the sector was low and attributed that to lack of resources and stressed the need for government to de-freeze ban on importation of excavators among others.

    Also, institutions and regulatory agencies must endeavour to commit to their work and be adequately resourced to promote sanity in the sector and minimise environmental degradation, corruption, and nepotism.

    In all of these, he assured that with the right policies, backed by judicious use of resources and with support from Development Partners, the mining sector could catalyze sustainable development within a framework of stakeholder collaboration.

    Source: GNA

  • Golden Star Resources to invest $10 million to revive Prestea Mine

    Golden Star Resources (GSR), a mining company, says it is investing US$10 million to revive operations at its Prestea Mine and to ensure it is streamlined to become profitable.

    The new capital will be invested in machinery, operation of a second level underground, access development, extensional drilling and other operations to get the mine to the next level and to enhance efficiency.

    Mr Andrew Wray, Chief Executive Officer of Golden Star Resources, said in a press briefing that although there were challenges at the Prestea Mine, the potential was there for it to be successful.

    “Prestea has the potential to be successful. What we believe the site needs is a plan for success and then the methodical execution of that plan,” he said.

    To properly prop up Prestea Mine to deliver, Mr Wray said enough time was spent in the second half of last year re-working the plan for the Mines and to support the team to deliver on the plan.

    “We are now given the team a plan that is achievable and we can then hold them to account,” he said.

    He said because the company was making an upfront investment in Prestea this year, it would be hit with some losses, but the expectation was that the Prestea Mine would be in a position to deliver from 2021 and beyond.

    “So Prestea is a very key focus for us and what that enables us to do, is to ensure that Wassa, which sits on the vast majority of business also gets the proper focus,” Mr Wray said.

    “Prestea is going to stand on its own two feet so that the profit that we generate from Wassa is reinvested in mining, and looking more regionally. “It is almost certain that there are other mines.”

    Apart from the investment in Prestea, Mr Wray said an additional US$45 million would be invested to expand operations at Wassa and to take it to the next level of growth.

    He said the focus was to start investing more in exploration programmes so that the company could deliver on the plans and promises to investors and the markets.

    Mr Wray said in 2018 and 2019 the business fell a little bit short of the guidance and the target it had set for the market largely because of performance at the Prestea Mines.

    He said while the investors knew the company was doing a great job, it was important to retain their trust and confidence in the business through good performance.

    On COVID-19, Mr. Wray said the Company had triggered all contingency measures to make sure production was not affected by coronavirus.

    He added, “As a business that has lived through Ebola, we have clear protocols and programmes in place and are ensuring that we monitor the risk levels and trigger-points.

    “This means protecting the people and the business. We are already screening people on site to ensure they do not pose a risk, and we have an isolation facility on site.”

    Source: GNA

  • Minister orders arrest of Chinese for operating quarry without permit

    The Minister of Lands and Natural Resources, Mr Kwaku Asomah-Cheremeh has ordered the arrest of three Chinese nationals operating a quarry company without a permit at the Afienya-Dawhenya Industrial and Urban Renewal Enclave in the Greater Accra Region.

    The three, who are yet to be identified, established Skyline Quarry Company and employed 30 Ghanaian workers.

    They dug large trenches and used dangerous explosives like dynamite to blast rocks underground.

    There were excavators busily working at the quarry site, with trucks loaded with chippings leaving the site.

    The Minister also ordered two other Ghanaians, building structures without a permit to stop work with immediate effect.

    He issued a warning to all individuals and groups putting up the residential property on state lands in Shai Hills, Afienya and Dawhenya to stop work in their own interest since no compensation would be paid by the government upon demolition.

    This came to light when Mr Asomah-Cheremeh led a team from the Lands Commission including; Mr Suleimana Dawuda Mahama, the Executive Secretary of the Commission, some police personnel, the media and technocrats of the Lands Ministry, to inspect on-going encroachment on the 13,200 acres of land acquired by the government in 2016 for an industrial enclave.

    The Minister said the industrial enclave was acquired for the purposes of establishing factories as individual investors could apply to the Lands Commission to properly acquire plots of lands for setting up factories.

    At Afienya, the team witnessed on-going construction of a private residential facility belonging to one John Quayson.

    According to Mr Quayson, he bought the land from Mckeon Estate. There was another Baba Seidu, who was not present at the time of our visit, but met the mason he had contracted to construct structures intended be used as real estate working on the site acquired by the government for an industrial hub.

    The Lands Minister said the government had issued an Executive Instrument and gazzetted the Land documents at the time of acquisition and would therefore not tolerate such impunity any longer.

    Source: GNA

  • Illegal miner trapped to death in galamsey pit

    An illegal miner has died after a mining pit collapsed on him at Akyem Ekorso, a community in the Atiwa West District of the Eastern Region.

    The incident happened Monday afternoon around 12:45 pm.

    Starr News has gathered that the victim identified only as Dogbeda went to the abandoned mining pit of a mining firm in the company of three others to engage in illegal mining.

    However, whilst mining, the already fractured hanging wall of the open-mined pit suddenly collapsed but three of his colleagues managed to escape.

    The Atiwa West District Operations Director, Doe Bansah, said “We were there to assess some bushfire situations, Immediately we got to Ekorso, we saw a lot of people rushing to the community. We were told a guy has been trapped in a mining pit. The sand collapsed on the person so we called the site owner who brought an excavator to remove the sand from the dead body and retrieved the dead body”.

    The body of the deceased was conveyed to the Kibi Government Hospital morgue by the Police.

    Illegal mining popularly known as galamsey has resurfaced in many mining communities in the Eastern Region.

    Osabarima Ofosuhene Appenteng II, the Chief of Asuom at a mini-rally for cocoa farmers organized by the Kade cocoa district in Akyem Asuom on Friday called on his subjects to help the fight against the menace.

    Meanwhile, residents of Akyem Abomoso on Monday, March 2, 2020, complained over pollution of the Birim River by illegal miners mining with impunity on the river.

    The return of illegal mining menace has been linked to the upcoming general election due to which enforcement of the law has been relaxed allowing the illegal miners mostly with political lineage to degrade the land.

    Already, the composition of 62 member anti-Galamsay taskforce “Galamstop” in the region has been questioned since its inauguration by the Inter-Ministerial Committee on Illegal Mining, IMCIM, in May 2019. The Taskforce has the Eastern Regional Chairman of the ruling New Patriotic Party Kingston Okomeng Kissi as the Director of Operation while most of the members are known supporters of the Party.

    Source: starrfm.com.gh

  • Ounces of gold also went missing during galamsey fight – Small scale miners reveal

    Concerned Small Scale Miners have revealed that ounces of gold seized by the galamsey task force between 2018 and 2019 have also gone missing.

    This comes on the back of the arrest of some individuals believed to be connected to the alleged missing excavators seized from illegal miners as part of efforts to clamp down on the menace.

    Presidents of the Concerned Small Scale Miners Micheal Kojo Peprah in an interview with Citi FM said the situation warrants further investigation.

    According to him, it looks like the fight launched to solve the galamsey issue was just to enrich some people in the country.

    “You’ve seized people’s excavators and those excavators can’t be found, they have seized people’s gold and those gold can’t be found, peoples pickup we can’t find them and at the end of the day, we are back to the same problem. If you were able to seize over 500 excavators and imagine the ounces of gold that will be seized alongside because all those excavators were used in mining…….and no one has come out to say we have apprehended these people in galamsey and this is the exhibit or the gold that we found so it means this fight against galamsey people were using it to enrich themselves, and now that we have brought the military and we have failed what is next?.”

    We will get to the bottom of missing excavators saga – Police CID

    The Police CID has assured that they will get to the bottom of the missing excavators’ saga after arresting six persons including suspended Central Regional Vice-Chair, Ekow Ewusi.

    This comes after the Police Service issued a statement announcing the arrest of six (6) persons for their involvement in the missing excavators and other equipment seized by operatives of Operation Vanguard yesterday February 4, 2020.

    Speaking on Starr FM today, PRO of the CID Juliana Obeng said: Investigations has started and CID will get to the end of this matter. Again, the missing excavators will be found and persons in connection with it will be dealt with by the law”.

    The suspects have since been cautioned and are in police custody pending further investigations.

    The six persons arrested so far are; Horace Ekow Ewusi, Frederick Ewusi, Joel Asamoah, Adnan Haruna, Frank Gyan, and John Arhin.

    However, on Monday, February 3, 2020, the CID picked up Mr. Ekow Ewusi, who is one of the leaders of Operation Vanguard, for interrogation over his role in the missing excavators and other equipment seized from illegal miners.

    Source: primenewsghana.com

  • Two miners saved as Zimbabwe rescue mission continues

    Efforts are being made in Zimbabwe to bring trapped illegal miners to the surface, after a shaft collapsed at a gold mine killing at least two other miners.

    The BBC’s Shingai Nyoka reports that the national disaster management agency has rescued two miners from the site in the town of Kwekwe who are now in hospital being treated for their injuries.

    On Thursday it was thought that 20 people were trapped underground but the government now says it’s not sure how many people remain trapped because some could have found their way out through other tunnels within the disused mine.

    The Globe and Phoenix mine had been in operation since the 1800s but was closed down over a decade ago because it was deemed environmentally unsafe.

    BBC correspondents say there are reports this latest accident may have been caused by rockfall, though this has not been confirmed.

    Mining is a major source of foreign currency in Zimbabwe, which has vast gold and mineral reserves including diamonds and platinum.

    But mining is largely unregulated, leading to many accidents. Twenty-two miners were killed nearby a year ago.

  • How Nigeria is losing billions to weak regulation of mining sector

    The Odonigi community in Moro local government area of Kwara State is blessed with large quantities of gold deposits over the years. However, illegal miners hold sway — five were arrested in 2017 with seven bags of gold.

    For a gold-rich community, however, basic amenities like schools and health care facilities, are luxuries. The only school in this community was locked, during a recent visit by this reporter, leaving the children to travel about seven kilometres to Alapa, which is located in another local government, to get basic education.

    This is also the case with healthcare and other basic necessities of life.

    For such a community, one would expect that the resources gotten from their land will be harnessed for their growth and development, but this is far from reality. Yes, gold mining is ongoing but it does not yield them any compensation.

    In fact, many, like Hassan Odonigi, the Mogaji of the community, were surprised at the mention of mineral resources in their community.

    In an interview with this reporter, he acknowledged their poor living conditions and confessed that asking for hospitals would be requesting too much. “We have not even gotten teachers for our school, you are talking about healthcare centre. Let them even give us the teachers first,” he said.

    Lost resources

    According to the Nigeria Extractive Industry Transparent Initiatives (NEITI), Nigeria lost $9 billion between 2014 to 2015 to illegal mining of gold and other mineral resources. While the definition of illegal mining has been restricted to miners without license, little attention is paid to the legal miners acting illegally.

    The money lost to illegal mining is mostly licensing fees and royalty to the government. While the government could be losing these funds, there is a bigger loss: this is the loss incurred through government’s inability to properly monitor and regulate the activities of miners.

    For instance, there was a rush in the mining of mineral resources in Oro town, Kwara State in the early 2000s. Tourmaline and topaz were in abundance, and people travelled from far and wide to partake in the rush. Labourers and buyers of gemstones, from within and outside the country, including places such as Mali and Senegal, thronged the place. But, this did not last beyond 2005, even though the exploration of mineral resources has not ceased.

    Labourers continue to dig massive holes looking for gemstones, using crude tools such as hammers, diggers and shovels. With a general lack of trust in the government, as well as the portable nature of the gemstone, the difficulty of monitoring both the legal and the illegal mining remains a huge challenge.

    After an initial difficulty accessing miners and dealers in the town, the reporter was finally directed to Dahiru Liman, a former senior special adviser on solid mineral to a former governor of Oyo State, Rashid Ladoja, who currently coordinates the mining activities in the town.

    Mr Liman told the reporter that illegal mining persists because of the failure of the federal government to implement its policies, particularly, on financial interventions.

    In June 2016, then Minister of Mines and Steel, Kayode Kayemi, announced the approval of N30 billion intervention to the mining sector, among other things, to improve the sector. But, Mr Liman is concerned about the disbursement of such funds.

    According to him, even if such funds are released, miners will not get it. “They will call the miners together, and present all our certificates. They will say, we will give you N50 million, N250 million, at the end, only one person will get from Kwara. It will be hard for you to see two people from Kwara., and the person – go and look – they are not miners. The real miners are suffering. How can things go on like that? That is why things are like this.”

    Difficulty in obtaining licence encouraging illegal mining

    The miners also said that the process of acquiring a mining licence is frustrating.

    The centralisation of the mining sector’s regulatory bodies also do not help. The Nigeria Mining Cadastre, — the agency with the permission to issue mining permit and lease — is located in Abuja. The implication of this is that miners have to go to Abuja, to process the permit.

    To the miners in Oro, the most important ‘licence’ is to settle the land owners and the King of the town, while Mr Liman handles the registration and licensing. He also provides protection in the event of police harassment through his company, Afrorocks Nigeria Limited.

    There is also a lack of trust in the government’s registration process, according to Mr Liman and Ayuba, popularly known as Pastor, who just like most miners in the town, is from Niger State.

    “The first place is to go to the owner of the land, then to the Kabiyesi. The kabiyesi will send you to the local government, then to Ilorin. Ilorin will be the one to send you to Abuja,” he said.

    “You will spend money, because anywhere you go to, you must ‘drop’ something. If the state sees that there is plenty of resources there, you, (the person) who submitted it will not get it. They will exchange your certificate. When you talk, they will say ‘where is your certificate.’ So how can you see another place, and take it to them again?”

    What the law says

    Section 44 (3) of the 1999 Constitution of Nigeria (as amended) vested the ownership of mineral resources to the federal government. As such, the licence to explore mineral resources is the exclusive right of the federal government.

    For a potential miner to get a permit, the individual must first have a registered company. If he suspects that there is mineral deposit on a piece of land, he will approach the owner of the land in question and after an agreement is reached, then the coordinate of the land is supposed to be taken to the Cadastre office in Abuja.

    But, this is one rigorous process most miners would rather avoid, especially because of the lack of trust in the system. For these miners, the easy compromise is to get people who are not miners but with existing permit and settle the King.

    A miner, Ede Obinna, re-echoed this concern during an interview with this reporter.

    “The process of acquiring (the) permit is cumbersome. The 2007 Mining Act does not recognise individuals. When you locate the site, you will take it to cadastre. They are in charge of issuing mining licences, permit to export minerals for commercial purposes, permit to export minerals for analysis, and collecting royalties on behalf of the government.

    “The problem is that if the government says N50,000, for you to speed up the process, you have to get people to help speed up the process by paying more,” he said.

    For a town of civil servants, the economy of Oro significantly benefits from the mining activities, legal or illegal. Here is how: Mr Ayuba explained that the local miners first get the permits from the land owner, who they pay. Then they source for labourers who are usually not paid, but settled with foods and drinks. They get to work until the gems are found. The gems are then divided into 10. The miner takes two portions, while the other eight are given to the labourers but are later bought back at “bush rate” which is usually very cheap. They are then taken to Ibadan where they are sold to Senegalese and Malians.

    But there seems to be a big problem with this structure: The miners are supposed to pay N75 for every gram of Pink Tourmaline. How then will the government determine the quantity of tourmaline removed? Henry Bolarinwa, the federal mines officer in Kwara State, said there is supposed to be an attaché to the sites, who monitors the activities of miners.

    “It is expected that you have to station an officer, and if you want to station an officer, you must cater for the officer. We need results, but how do you help those officers to achieve the result. You must be able to get accommodation for the officers,” Mr Bolarinwa said.

    He further complained about the shortage of manpower, lack of adequate support from law enforcement agents and also traditional rulers, with respect to providing covers for miners to operate illegally.

    “Unfortunately, we are constrained by the attitude of our people. At times, you will get to a site, and they will say a particular Emir is in charge. Whatever we get, there is the 13 per cent derivative. The state government is not even helping us. The law says when you are licenced, bring it to the ministry for us to monitor and inspect the site. Unfortunately, they only move to the site as soon as they have the permit.”

    The valuation process is equally faulty, according to Mr Ayuba, because even the royalty for the gems is determined by the ‘bush rate’ and not the actual rate they are supposed to be sold.

    Although the officer said his office is conducting awareness through the joint committee called Mineral Resources and Environment Management Committee (MIREMCO), however, the level of awareness is still poor.

    Close

    Another area where even legal miners are coming short is in the aspect of maintaining the environment.

    In Oro, there are several abandoned pits and tunnels that are just an inch from collapsing, which pose a great threat to residents and livestock.

    A department of the Ministry of Solid Mineral; Mining Environmental Compliance (MEC) is supposed to monitor the mining sites, to ensure environmental compliance. However, in all the mining sites, legal and illegal, abandoned pits litter the environment.

    According to Mr Ayuba, since they have paid the land owners, they have no business with the pits.

    To further exacerbate the situation, the sand at the sites are sold to people for sand filling, leaving holes that are more than 10ft deep, in the bush.

    One of the locals who gave his name as Adekunle recounted how about four years ago, a student at Dab Comprehensive High School, Iddo Oro died in one of the pits, while attempting to swim in the pool in one of the pits, some of which have been abandoned for more than four years. The pits are behind the school.

    Photo Caption: Dab Comprehensive High School where a student died while attempting to swim in an abandoned pit just behind the school.

    Way Forward

    Mr Bolarinwa said the means for solution to these challenges fall within the scope of the Mining Environmental Compliance (MEC) department of the Ministry of Solid Minerals.

    According to him, “if you are removing sand, there is a particular level (at which) you can remove it. If you go below that, it means you want to completely degrade the place. The law says you must have a development agreement. (There is) the Environment Protection and Rehabilitation Program (EPRP), which you have to do, (as well as) the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) which every mineral title holder is obliged to do before the commencement of mining.”

    The pits are still there, uncovered.

    The communities are still there, without life’s basic amenities.

    Source: premiumtimesng.com

  • Mining records 34.4% inflation in October

    During the month October 2019, mining and quarrying sub-sectors recorded the highest inflation of 34.4 per cent, the Ghana statistical Service GSS) has announced.

    This according to the GSS, was followed by the utilities sub-sector with 12.6 per cent.

    Read: Mining firm ordered to conduct structural integrity after two die in pit

    The Manufacturing sub-sector recorded the least inflation of 3.1 per cent.

    Deputy Government Statistician, David Kombat, at a press conference in Accra on Wednesday, November 20 said the Producer Price Inflation (PPI) for the month October 2019 was 8.8 per cent,

    Mr Kombat said is 0.2 percentage points lower compared to the 9.1 per cent recorded in September 2019.

    Read: 2 dead as another Shaanxi mining disaster sparks outrage

    He explained that developments in the international market influenced the inflation rate for the mining and quarrying sectors.

    “The world market prices can influence the price of gold; if the price of gold increases on the world market, producers equally adjust their prices irrespective of whether the cost of input has increased or not,” he said.

     

    Source: laudbusiness.com