Monday, October 07, 2024

Ghana’s wildcat gold mining booms, poisoning people and nature

Reuters | October 7, 2024 

Gold exploration in Ghana.
 (Image: Screenshot from AlJazeera’s documentary.)

By Maxwell Akalaare Adombila


PRESTEA-HUNI VALLEY, Ghana – At an unlicensed gold mine in Ghana, men in t-shirts, shorts and rubber boots wade through pools of muddy water laced with mercury, pull out rocks with bare hands and operate a rickety sluice as they search for the precious ore.

The ramshackle mine is part of a booming business that is generating livelihoods and informal revenue streams for Ghana’s economy, even as it harms miners’ health, pollutes waterways, destroys forests and cocoa farms, and fuels crime.

“It’s risky but I just want to survive,” said one of the men at the wildcat site visited by Reuters in the Prestea-Huni Valley district in western Ghana.

The 24-year-old accounting student, who asked not to be named because he was involved in illegal activities, said he had been skipping classes to prospect for gold because he needed the money, having lost his father as a teenager.

There was no professional protective equipment at the mine. Men wore flimsy plastic shopping bags on their heads. One had swimming goggles and another a rice bag covering his torso.

The unlicensed gold mining industry, known in Ghana as “galamsey”, has grown at a breakneck pace this year as global gold prices have risen by almost 30%, enticing new entrants.

Small-scale mines produced 1.2 million ounces of gold in the first seven months of this year, more than in the whole of 2023, according to data from Ghana’s mining sector regulator.

About 40% of Ghana’s total gold output comes from small mines, as opposed to concessions operated by multi-national firms. Some 70-80% of the small mines are unlicensed.
Poisoned profits

Martin Ayisi, head of Ghana’s Minerals Commission, the mining industry regulator, said most galamsey gold was smuggled out of the country and was therefore not contributing to national gold export revenues.

For Ayisi, the rise in gold prices is good for Ghana, helping it recover from a severe economic crisis in 2022 that required a $3-billion IMF bailout.

“We should be able to get a lot of money and probably exit the IMF programme earlier,” he said, forecasting national gold export revenues would more than double to $10 billion this year.

But industry experts say the lines between legal mining and galamsey are blurred, and gold from informal mines represents a larger proportion of revenues than the authorities acknowledge.

The dangers of galamsey, however, are not in dispute.

Dozens of miners have been killed in collapsing pits in recent years, according to news reports and human rights groups, while hospitals and health centres report high numbers of early deaths from pulmonary diseases of miners and residents of towns and villages near mines.


These are caused by inhaling dust that contains heavy metals such as lead, as well as poisonous fumes from the mercury and nitric acid the miners use to leach gold out of sediment.

The chemicals are then dumped on the ground or in rivers. Ghana’s water authority says mercury and heavy metals from mining have contaminated about 65% of water sources.

Meanwhile, thousands of hectares (acres) of cocoa plantations and virgin forest have been destroyed by illegal miners, according to data from Global Forest Watch, an online monitoring platform.

Protesters have taken to the streets in Accra in recent weeks to criticise President Nana Akufo-Addo’s government over what they saw as its failure to tackle these problems. “Leaders, you’ve failed us!” read some of the placards.

“Galamsey has to stop. We want to live long. We don’t want to fall sick. We don’t want to go to the hospital,” said Aboubacar Sadekh, who was taking part in a march on Sept. 22, draped in a Ghanaian flag.

The government denies that it is failing to act on galamsey. When he came to power in 2017, Akufo-Addo pledged to take action on the issue, and during his time in office the government has launched crackdowns, deploying soldiers to arrest illegal miners. In some cases, mining equipment was seized and destroyed.
Organised crime

Opinion polls suggest galamsey is one of the top five issues for voters ahead of a Dec. 7 general election.

The main candidates to replace outgoing Akufo-Addo as president, Vice President Mahamudu Bawumia and former President John Mahama, have pledged to formalise galamsey, for example by funding a state agency to explore for gold and map areas for locals to mine.

But successive governments have been promising for years to tackle the problem without making much headway, partly because powerful people are benefitting from the industry, experts say.

Chris Aston, head of a British-backed programme aimed at regulating small-scale gold mining in Ghana, said artisanal miners were vulnerable to organised crime gangs, who provide them with funding for equipment up-front, unlike other lenders.

“Miner pre-financing is one way that organised crime groups can penetrate the gold supply chain,” he said. Funders then “require miners to sell the gold they mine back to them at a subsidised rate”.

Emmanuel Kwesi Anning, a security consultant based in Accra, said galamsey was fuelling an increase in gun-trafficking because those overseeing illegal mines sought armed protection against rivals or thieves.

He also said politicians and traditional rulers in some areas were taking a cut of galamsey profits, further entrenching the problem.

“It has become an elite consensus that they’ll not touch this business.”

Ghana’s information minister did not respond to requests for comments on the allegations of organised crime involvement, gun running and corruption.

A top official in the National Security Ministry, who did not wish to be named because they were not authorised to speak about the issue in public, said authorities were working to address the links between illegal mining, money laundering and gun trafficking.

(Reporting by Maxwell Akalaare AdombilaEditing by Estelle Shirbon and Frances Kerry)

Ghanaians call on government to shut down all illegal gold mines

Bloomberg News | October 4, 2024 |

Ghanaian policemen observe some ore seized on pits operated by artisanal gold miners to verify the presence of visible gold. Stock image.

Hundreds of Ghanaians have called on their government to clamp down on illegal mining in Africa’s top gold producer in a second day of protests.


Placard-wielding demonstrators had called on Thursday for the release of fellow protesters who were arrested in an earlier march. On Friday, their demands focused on the need to crack down on illegal mining that’s blamed for polluting rivers and soils in the West African nation. A last day of protests is planned Saturday.

“This is not a crisis but a fight for our nation’s soul,” Brownson Adatsi, the lead convener for the Free The Citizens Movement, said, reading out a petition in the capital, Accra. “Our children’s future is at stake, and we cannot, and will not stand by while our nation is ravaged by greed and negligence.”

Gold is a mainstay of the Ghanaian economy, accounting for nearly half of exports in 2023, according to central bank data. Large-scale miners such as Newmont Corp. and Gold Fields Ltd. have to adhere to strict environmental rules, but a thriving artisanal and small-scale mining industry is less regulated. Within the small-mining space, authorities concede that a large number of mines operate illegally, which means there’s no oversight over their activities.

Known as ‘galamsey’, a colloquialism originating from the phrase “gather them and sell,” illegal mining has been spreading with impunity, according to activists.

Unions are also putting pressure on the government to act, with just two months left before Dec. 7 presidential elections.

The incumbent, Nana Akufo-Addo, met with the country’s biggest labor union, Trades Union Congress, Thursday, the presidency said in a statement. The closed-door meeting came after the union announced it would be embarking on an indefinite strike from Oct. 10 to demand a ban on all forms of small-scale gold mining. A spokesman for the union couldn’t immediately be reached for comment about the outcome of that meeting Friday.

Artisanal and small-scale mining sector, officially accounts for about a third of Ghana’s gold production, but not all of it is illegal.

For many, ‘artisanal and small-scale’ still conjures images of people eking out a living using rudimentary tools, like chisels to break ore or pans to scoop up gold-bearing sediments. But there’s been an increased use of large excavation machinery and dredging equipment. Some of these machines are used near rivers and forests – and even inside them – and there’s no effort made to rehabilitate mining sites after excavation when operations are illegal. That’s left soils and rivers polluted, causing disease and water shortages.

“There’s no small-scale mining anymore,” one of the placards read.

(By Yinka Ibukun)

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