General News of Monday, 1 February 2021

Source: www.ghanaweb.com

FLASHBACK: Too many politicians are funded from ‘galamsey’ money – Kofi Bentil

Vice President of IMANI Africa, Kofi Bentil Vice President of IMANI Africa, Kofi Bentil

A Senior Vice President of Policy Think Tank, IMANI Africa, Kofi Bentil in proposing a solution for managing the menace of illegal mining (galamsey) said he was pessimistic about the fight due to the involvement of politicians in the illegal activity.

In a view shared in 2020, Mr Bentil asked that District Chief Executives of areas where galamsey activities take place be sacked as a way of tackling the menace.

Read the full article as first published by GhanaWeb on February 1, 2020 below:

Kofi Bentil, Senior Vice President of Think Tank, IMANI Africa, says he is pessimistic about the fight against illegal mining known as ‘galamsey’ because too many politicians and leaders in the country are involved in the menace.

According to him, there’s only one solution to fighting ‘galamsey’ and that is to make a simple rule that wherever illegal mining is found, the District Chief Executive should be sacked.

“For me, it’s simple as that but do you know why that will not be done, because too many of our leaders are involved in ‘galamsey’, too many politicians are funded from ‘galamsey’ money and too many of the people involved in ‘galamsey’ have too much power in the country so we won’t win the fight against ‘galamsey’,” he stressed.

“When they formed Operation Vanguard to stop ‘galamsey’, the same group of people have become the enablers and we’re not serious about ‘galamsey’ because our leaders are involved in it,” Kofi Bentil said on JoyNews’ News File on Saturday, February 1.

Meanwhile, the Minister of Environment, Science, Technology & Innovation, Professor Kwabena Frimpong-Boateng has said that about 90% of illegal small-scale miners (galamseyers) have ceased operations since the Operation Vanguard Team was established almost three years ago.

“I can say 90 percent, by and large, of those who are doing ‘galamsey’, I can say about 90 percent have stopped. These galamsey people are people who have no money to buy concessions, have no money to buy excavators; they get their shovels and things and go to the bush and start digging. That is what we call galamsey – gather and sell – these are people we are targeting. So far, we have about 20,000 or more who have moved from ‘galamsey’ into community mining. These are people who have been vetted in Ashanti, Eastern, Western, Upper East, Upper West and Central regions”, he explained earlier in an interview.

On the number of excavators impounded by Operation Vanguard, Professor Frimpong-Boateng said; ‘about 140 or so are in the custody of the committee’, contrary to the about 500 excavators that were alleged to have been seized by the Taskforce during Mr John Peter Amewu’s era as Minister of Lands and Natural Resources.

President Nana Akufo-Addo established the National Taskforce Committee otherwise known as Operation Vanguard to fight the destruction of water bodies particularly due to illegal small-scale mining.