President Mahama calls the galamsey fight tough

Ghana's illegal mining mess runs so deep that even a government shakeup just shuffles the same operators to new political patrons.

Mahama on galamsey's deep roots
  • President John Dramani Mahama called galamsey deeply entrenched in society.
  • Traditional rulers and political appointees are all tangled up.
  • Operators just switch loyalty when governments change over.
  • Mahama admitted his party has its people involved.
Enforcement struggles on the ground
  • NAIMOS faces community-level pushback during crackdowns regularly.
  • Chiefs and youth physically resist enforcement teams showing up.
  • Mahama conceded that winning this fight overnight is impossible.
  • Patrol boats for waterways are missing for nine-month stretches.
The cocoa sector is fueling the problem
  • Rock-bottom cocoa prices drove farmers toward gold mining instead.
  • Struggling producers simply handed over farmland for galamsey operations.
  • Cocoa industry instability keeps feeding the mining pipeline directly.
  • The government wants farmers getting 70% of global cocoa prices.
Resource and policy fixes in progress
  • An automatic pricing mechanism for cocoa is being developed.
  • Stabilized prices could theoretically pull farmers back to agriculture.
  • Finance ministry collaboration aims to fund enforcement logistics properly.
  • Mahama framed the campaign as difficult but absolutely non-negotiable.
 

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