play videoPresident Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo (left), Dr Randy Abbey (right)
Veteran Broadcaster Dr Randy Abbey has slammed the presidency over its response to the report on illegal small-scale mining in Ghana by former Minister of Environment, Science, Technology, and Innovation and ex-chair of the Inter-Ministerial Committee on Illegal Mining (IMCIM), Prof Kwabena Frimpong-Boateng.
Speaking on his Good Morning Ghana programme on Tuesday, Dr Abbey said that after failing to act on the report for over two years, Akufo-Addo’s office is now telling Ghanaians that the report is full of personal grievances of Prof Frimpong Boateng.
He said that the allegations made against the president and some leading figures in his government by his former appointee and former head of the task force he (the president) put in place to fight galamsey are serious and should be treated as such.
He suggested that President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo and his office with the posture they have taken on the matter are taking Ghanaians for granted.
“How does a president who told the world including Ghanaians that he was prepared to put his presidency on the line for the galamsey fight, describe this new document submitted to his chief of staff …. as a report of personal grievances?
“For a government that has spent hundreds of millions of dollars, what we are losing as a nation, how we have galvanised the entire country and even the globe to support this particular project if no mean a person than the same minister, who chaired the taskforce sent a report like this, he mentions the president, he mentions ministers, he mentions people at the presidency, he mentions people who have influence… at the least don’t these people deserve the opportunity to clear their names.
“Does the president himself not deserve the opportunity to clear his name? Because if indeed it is true that the devastation of the forest and who was responsible for that was made known to the president in the presence of that person and he did nothing, that is a serious indictment," he said.