TOUGHER PUNISHMENT FOR ILLEGAL MINERS SOON
Members of the Minerals Commission Board in a group photograph with staff of AsankoGold |
The Minerals Commission is pursuing an
amendment of the Minerals and Mining Law to increase the punishment for illegal
local and foreign mining individuals, as part of measures to deter selfish
people from exploiting the mineral resources of the country, at the expense on
human and national development.
The proposed amendment of the law which is
currently in Parliament, if approved, will increase the punishment against
illegal miners from the present one thousand 500 Ghana Cedis to 60 thousand
Ghana Cedis in fine or a minimum jail term of three years.
Convicted foreign
illegal miners will be fined 17 penalty Units which translates into huge
monetary value.
The Chief Executive Officer of the Minerals Commission, Dr.
Tony Aubynn disclosed this to some newsmen during an inspection tour of mining
sites in the Amansie West district of Ashanti by members of the Board of
Directors of the Commission.
The Minerals
Commission’s CEO disclosed also that the proposed amendment to the Minerals and
Mining Act aims also to empower the Magistrate Court to adjudicate illegal
mining cases, instead of concentrating all the powers on the High Court, so as
to help speed up the trial of such criminal cases.
Additionally, all the
machinery and equipment used in illegal mining activities will be confiscated
to the state.
Touching on the current state of illegal mining in the country,
Dr. Aubynn praised the Presidential Task Force on Galamsey for the success
achieved in their work to flush out illegal miners from the systems, saying
that the strategy has significantly reduced the menace.
He said the next phase
of the national plan is that the Commission will intensify public awareness on
the economic, social and environmental dangers, as well as human security
issues involved in galamsey so as to discourage people from engaging in it.
The
Commission, led by its Chairman, Emmanuel Kofi Kaningen, toured the sites of a
new mining company, AsankoGold, which is still setting up its processing plants
to begin actual gold mining operations in three areas.
These are the Abore,
Adubiaso and Nkran pits.
They also visited the sites of two licensed small
scale mining companies owned by Ghanaians and employing many other local
people.
At the AsankoGold Mines, the Board Chairman, Mr. Kaningen expressed
satisfaction with the environmental management as well as community development
policies.
At the small scale mining sites, the members were all satisfied with
the environmental protection
plans, especially the covering of the mining pits
and encouraged the miners to keep it up in the interest of the current and
unborn generations.
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