Ghana: Land of gold, but on life support, desecrated, abused, poisoned
On Saturday, October 22, 2022, my article on the destructive effects of illegal mining in our country, a land sitting on a pot of gold, entitled: “Ghana: Indeed land of gold”, was published in the Reality Zone column in the Daily Graphic.
Below is a reproduction of the article, two years on, with almost the entire nation now in a panic mode, crying for intervention, perhaps rapid chemotherapy on the cancerous effects of illegal mining on our environment. Please read on:
So the evil of illegal mining is revealing to us that even homes, people’s compounds, villages and farmlands are all sitting on gold, that precious metal listed on international commodity markets.
I have been gobsmacked watching and listening to accounts of farmers, villagers and many individuals, over the last few weeks.
The people recounted their harrowing experiences with illegal mining operators, popularly known as galamsey, as they dug trenches in their farms and homes to prospect and actually mine that precious metal that had made other nations rich and well-developed.
It is even becoming a reality that some major roads in some parts of the country were constructed on top of gold deposits, possibly unknown to the road contractors who constructed the roads.
A video making the rounds this week must sadden even the hardest of hearts.
According to the video, the main Enchi-Asankragua road, which was beautifully constructed years ago and at that time, the only beautiful road in the area, is now at the mercy of illegal miners.
The solid road has been desecrated and now caving in with huge cracks, rendering it perilous and deadly to ply on because illegal miners have dug deep under to mine gold.
Truths
Yes, galamsey has been very cruel and wicked to our environment and human health. However, looking at it all, the idiomatic expression that there is a silver lining in every cloud brings out to me some truths about illegal mining.
The truth that though abhorrent and a menace, illegal mining and the extent and pace at which it is going is a revelation that to a large extent, our country is in reality sitting pretty on riches, a pot of gold never imagined by some of us.
The truth is that the rich mineral, which nature has deposited in Ghana is not only confined to the areas being mined by well-known large-scale mining companies but spreads across the country.
Whoever christened this country “Gold Coast” at some point in our history must have been a visionary even as far back as pre-independence.