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8th April 2025 5:00:00 AM
2 mins readBy: Amanda Cartey
Eco-Conscious Citizens, a prominent environmental advocacy group, has strongly opposed the recent policy announced by Interior Minister Mohammed Mubarak Muntaka, which involves deporting foreign nationals involved in illegal mining (galamsey) without trial.
During an engagement with the Ashanti Regional Police Command, Minister Muntaka announced that the government would deport foreigners involved in illegal mining activities instead of prosecuting them. He argued that this approach would protect the environment and save the country money.
"We have resolved, as a new policy, that for two things—whether you’re involved in galamsey or cutting down our trees unlawfully, or engaging in fraudulent activities, whether through computer fraud or other means—when we arrest any foreigner, we are not interested in prosecuting them. Our first option is to take them back to their country,” Muntaka stated.
However, this decision has faced backlash from environmental groups, with Eco-Conscious Citizens strongly opposing it. The group’s Coordinator, Awula Serwah, shared her concerns during an interview on Morning Starr with Naa Dedei Tettey. She emphasized that merely deporting offenders without any legal consequences would fail to serve as a deterrent to future violations.
“If someone is involved in environmental terrorism, destroying our forest reserves and poisoning our water bodies, and what you’re saying is that they can come to Ghana, engage in these activities, and when we catch them, we just pay for their fare to return to their country without prosecution, no jail time, and no restitution—then that’s not a deterrent,” Serwah said.
Serwah went on to explain that such a policy would encourage more foreigners to engage in galamsey, as the risks of facing severe legal consequences are minimized. She also pointed out that Ghana's porous borders make it easy for offenders to return under different identities, referencing the case of Aisha Huang, a notorious galamsey queenpin who was deported but later returned to continue illegal mining activities.
She argued that the policy undermines the rule of law, particularly the provisions of the Lands and Minerals Act, which mandates the prosecution of individuals caught engaging in illegal mining. "The idea that we won’t prosecute them to save money doesn’t stand scrutiny. You need to deal with them robustly to discourage them from coming. You need to prosecute and imprison them, and then after they’ve served their sentences, they can return to their country,” Serwah added.
Eco-Conscious Citizens is urging the government to reconsider its approach, calling for tougher measures such as prosecution and imprisonment to deter foreign nationals from engaging in illegal mining in Ghana.
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