The time has come for officialdom to be told a few home truths about small-scale gold mining.
With respect, individuals and business entities deploying 32-tonne
excavators and bulldozers in Ghana, are not engaged in small-scale gold
mining - and ought not to be issued with small-scale gold mining
licences: and given concessions under any circumstances.
It is an outrage that currently they are issued with permits and
licenses for small-scale gold mining - and given concessions on top of
that outrage.
The question is: How many of those issued with small-scale gold mining
permits by the Minerals Commission, who are now busy destroying land
providing valuable eco-system services to Ghanaians, have even paid
the reclamation bond required from those causing such wanton
destruction, for example, I ask? Ditto their fair share of corporate
tax - and pay fair compensation to the wretched victims of their
fraudulent compensation-schemes?
The desolation and damage caused in a few hours, by 32-tonne excavators
and bulldozers, to what has taken millions of years to evolve - and
the preservation of which is vital for quality-of-life reasons for
present and future generations of our people - has to be seen to be
believed.
At a time of global climate change, it is intolerable and unacceptable
that a few wealthy people, can use the cover of a law meant to create
self-employment opportunities for teeming masses of the rural poor
across Ghana, to cause such untold havoc to the natural environment,
across our nation.
And it is destruction on a scale that is unspeakable, harrowing, mind-numbing, unimaginable, and irreparable.
Above all, it is harm to the natural environment that amounts to a
terrible crime against humanity - which we must neither accept nor
tolerate as a people.
Is it not time someone engaged the Centre for Public Interest Law
(CEPIL) to sue the Minerals Commission, the Environmental Protection
Agency and the Water Resources Commission, on behalf of the people of
Ghana - for what in effect amounts to criminal negligence: issuing
permits to people and business entities applying for small-scale gold
mining permits, under false pretences: knowing perfectly well that they
will be using 32-tonne excavators and bulldozers, to mine gold?
To describe mining for gold with heavy earth-moving equipment as small-scale is an egregious misnomer - and disingenuous.
The owners and operators of 32-tonne excavators and bulldozers deployed
to work a gold mining concession, must not be categorised as
small-scale gold miners - for they are not mining gold on a small-scale.
On the contrary, they are using earth-moving heavy-duty machinery that
cause damage to the natural environment on a scale that is
apocalyptic.
The small-scale mining law was never meant to give carte blanche to
criminal syndicates to poison our soils and pollute our streams and
rivers - in an enterprise that amounts to the brutal gang-rape of
Mother Nature with impunity.
The small-scale mining law was meant to give employment to individuals
and groups of people using traditional methods to mine gold.
It was never meant to provide legal protection from prosecution, for
wealthy criminals driven by unfathomable greed, who do not care one
jot about the effect of their actions on the natural environment, and
on their fellow humans - and give them a license to destroy the
Ghanaian countryside in their quest for gold.
Neither was the small-scale mining law ever meant to provide legal cover
to selfish people - and permit the destruction of our natural
heritage and the poisoning of our soils and rivers with mercury and
cyanide.
Listening to Peace FM yesterday afternoon, it became obvious to me that
the wealthy criminal syndicates behind most of the illegal gold mining
causing such harm to the natural environment across vast swathes of
the Ghanaian countryside, are now on a PR offensive.
Their trump card is a "documentary" to "be aired soon". Being who they
are, no doubt the purpose of the said "documentary", is to give the
distinct impression to viewers who are not discerning, that they are
watching real-time events showing the unlawful conduct of actual
security service personnel raiding a "small-scale" mining company's
premises.
Those in charge of the safety of the Republic and securing the Government of the day in our democracy, had better sit up.
If it has not yet dawned on them, criminal Chinese triad-gangs with a
global reach, looking to launder cash from their criminal activities
elsewhere, may have found a perfect home in Ghana - and willing and
enthusiastic allies in the wealthy criminal syndicates behind illegal
gold mining in our country.
Any discerning and patriotic individual who listened to the president of
the small-scale miners association on Peace FM could not help but to
have been appalled and alarmed by what they heard.
That genius seemed completely oblivious to the fact that he was
describing the profile of money- launderers - in a hurry to turn dirty
money into the best store of value there is on the planet Earth: gold -
in telling the millions listening to Peace FM that the Chinese
investors funding the operations of small-scale gold mining companies
took risks that our conservative banks would never take.
Today, the president of the Small-scale Miners Association, who also
doubles as the president of the Ghana-China Business Association, is
said to be suing the government because the security agencies
apparently raided his premises and allegedly stole his gold.
Perhaps he is a reasonable and law-abiding fellow - and smooth and
charming. But, tomorrow, someone else wearing the two hats he wears
today, might be a ruthless and cynical outlaw, able to deploy
tremendous firepower - thanks to his alliance-of-convenience with
criminal Chinese triad-gangs - to fight and kill dozens of men and
women from the security agencies, sent to arrest him for multiple
murders committed by him and his Chinese partners-in-crime.
Since they are mostly potential warlords-in-the-making, the time has
come for officialdom to clip their wings - by withdrawing all the
small-scale mining licences and permits issued to individuals and
business entities who use excavators and bulldozers to mine gold in
Ghana.
We are definitely looking at a situation in which issued small-scale
gold mining permits are being used to give legal cover to gold mining
that is not small-scale in scope.
The authorities must act now before it is too late to do so - and we all
end up as the victims of 'small-scale' gold miners: living blighted
lives in a desolate land, lumbered with poisoned soils, and contending
with streams and rivers polluted by cyanide and mercury. A word to
the wise...
Tel: 027 745 3109.
Tuesday, 14 May 2013
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