General News of Thursday, 15 April 2021
Source: 3news.com
The ongoing two-day consultative forum being organized by the Government of Ghana on illegal small scale mining (galamsey) in Ghana, is raising issues that are already known by all stakeholders, Forest and Climate Change Manager at A Rocha Ghana, Daryl Bosu, has said.
He explained on the New Day show on TV3 with Johnnie Hughes Thursday, April 15 that the problems in the sector have to do with permitting and licensing, compliance and enforcement of the laws in the sector as well as environmental issues.
What is needed at the moment, he said, is the will by authorities to deal with these issues that have been on the table for a very long time.
The forum being held at the Accra international conference centre will end today Thursday, April 15.
Mr Bosu said “Yes, this dialogue is long overdue. I think that we have been speaking to these galamsey issues and we have been having dialogues for a very long time. Maybe we will give the government the benefit of the doubt because you start a whole project management cycle, you go through everything but it doesn’t work so you want to start all over again."
“The good thing about this process is that we know the issues. It is just a matter of making sure the issues that have been identified in the last four years we actually flag them, put them on the table and ask them how do we address these challenges that have made us not to make progress."
“That is what I am expecting this dialogue to give us. So far, from yesterday to today, I see we still share a lot of information, information that we already know.
“We need to zoom in, there are challenges with the legal framework, the compliance and enforcement. How do we deal with those challenges."
“There are issues with environment safeguards, how do we address those. There are issues with permitting and licensing what are the solutions. These solutions should then be vetted by the composition you see on the table now.”
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo said at the forum that he will not act on hearsay in his quest to end the galamsey practice in Ghana.
He said this while delivering a speech at the National Dialogue on Small Scale Mining Wednesday, April 14.