There is need to encourage local illegal miners to venture into small-scale mining under a more legalised system to help do away with the many destructive activities currently going on, Professor Akilagkpa Sawyerr, Chairman of Government Mining Review and Negotiation Team, has said.
He therefore charged Civil Society
groups interested in natural resources management to partner Government to make
small-scale mining a viable option for illegal Ghanaian miners.
Prof. Sawyerr was speaking at the Fourth
Annual Civil Society Review of the natural resources and environment sector in
Ghana last week.
“Civil society and all stakeholders
should support government to develop a proper mining policy as part of a general
national development plan that would help finance and train local illegal
miners to push them into small-scale mining.
“Government should be compelled to
locate the mining policy in a broad national development plan… we should work
out the cost in mining economically and environmentally and make the choices as
to whether to go into mining or not,” he said.
The annual review meeting was an
initiative of KASA Ghana, a civil society support mechanism that aims to
promote evidence-based research and advocacy in the natural resource and
environment sector.
The three-day meeting therefore serves
as a platform for policy-review and coordinated engagements in the natural
resources sector.
Prof. Sawyerr said Ghana in the past had
“not done enough in our negotiations concerning our natural resources”, adding
“we are now doing something slowly to correct the situation”.
Ms. Barbara Serwaa Asamoah, Deputy
Minister of Lands and Natural Resources, said key challenges confronting the
sector are effective law enforcement and policy implementation at all levels to
combat the menace of land degradation, illegal chainsaw operations and illegal
mining activities.
She asked civil society to continue to
dialogue with Government to ensure sustainable development and management of
Ghana’s natural resources.
“Let me assure civil society that Government
values your participation and input in the natural resources and environment
sector.
“Indeed, we expect civil society,
organised labour and the media to hold Government accountable to its commitment
-- and also contribute innovative ideas and practical solutions for addressing
the challenges confronting the NRE sector,” the Minister said.
Mr. Zakaria Yakubu, KASA Coordinator, explained
that the platform will serve as an information sharing and learning avenue for
stakeholders, and to review status and progress in Natural Resource and
Environmental (NRE) Governance.
The over-100 representatives of state
and non-state actors are also to examine the perspective of civil society on the
natural resources sector; and analyse key achievements, gaps, challenges and
recommendations for priority actions.
Mr. Richard Ellimah, member of the
National Coalition on Mining, said apart from the Chinese, many foreign
nationals such as Americans and Spanish are all into illegal mining against the
mining laws.
He urged the state to make deliberate
efforts to ensure that many Ghanaians are involved in small-scale mining.
“I emphasised the need to design mining
policy that enforces the mining laws, as well as a polluter- pays policy that will
oblige a company to pay for polluting the environment,” he said.
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