The Wassa Association of Communities Affected by Mining
(WACAM) says "life with mining is hell" in mining communities in
Ghana as these communities are deprived of their farmlands and
become dependent of food rations.
A press statement Mr Daniel Owusu-Koranteng, Executive
Director of WACAM, signed, said many mining communities have lost
their economic livelihood through displacement and areas that used
to be important food producing areas have become areas of food
deficit.
The release, which is in an apparent response to the theme of
the 80th anniversary of the Ghana Chamber of Mines - Life without
mining is impossible- catalogues the negative impact of surface
mining on the people and the environment.
It said the Chamber ignored the realities of the destruction
of basic human needs for survival such as the need for clean air,
clean water and good agricultural lands that mining destroyed.
WACAM said mining affected the health status of affected
communities and reduced the productivity of farmers, as abandoned
pits became breeding grounds of mosquitoes leading to the high
incidence of malaria.
It said "surface mining is gradually killing agriculture but
the negative effects of mining on the agriculture sector is
completely missing in the discussions on the rising cost of food
prices. "If major areas of agricultural production are gradually
becoming areas of net food deficit as a result of the operations of
surface mining companies, then we need to have a foresight to
recognise that we are mining ourselves out of existence."
WACAM noted: "Mining has a life span whilst agriculture is in
perpetuity. The nation should consider the long-term consequences
of promoting surface mining, which is inherently unsustainable
against agriculture, which is sustainable. The signs have started
showing and we ignore them at our own peril."
The Wassa Association of Communities Affected by Mining
(WACAM) has issued a press statement signed by its Executive
Director, Mr Daniel Owusu-Koranteng cataloguing the negative impact
of mining in connection with the 80th anniversary of the Ghana
Chamber of Mines (full text):
Mining is Killing Agriculture
The soaring food price fuelled by external factors and its
effects on national food prices makes it imperative for national
discussions on our economic direction. WACAM is of the opinion that
Ghana possesses enormous agricultural potential which if properly
developed would insulate the country from the global food crisis.
In the past two decades, there had been a paradigm shift in
our economic policy from dependence on agriculture to mining and we
have exhibited a strong desire and commitment to promote the mining
sector above all sectors through the provision of generous
incentives to attract foreign Direct Investment to the extractive
sector. Globally, FDI inflows to the agricultural sector is about 5
per cent whilst in Ghana FDI inflows into the extractive sector
accounts for about 70 per cent of the total FDI inflows into the
economy of Ghana.
WACAM had been concerned about the fact that large tracts of
agricultural lands are currently under mining concession. As at
1998, government had granted more that two hundred mining leases
resulting in mining companies holding 30 per cent of the country's
lands surface area in mining concessions.
Even more worrying is the increasing mining activities in the
important food producing areas in Ghana. Multinational mining
companies are mining in Western, Eastern, Ashanti and in the Brong
Ahafo Region and these are areas that constitute the food basket of
the country. Multinational mining companies Anglogold Ashanti,
Golden Star Resources, Newmont Ghana Gold Limited, Goldfields Ghana
Limited and Chirano Gold Mines etc hold large tracts of
agricultural lands as mining concessions.
Concessions of mining companies could cover land areas from
50 km2 to 4,000 km2 and these concessions are agricultural lands
that form the economic base of many mining communities.
Many of the affected communities have lost their economic
livelihood through displacement and areas that used to be important
food production areas have become areas of net food deficit. We
would cite a few examples to demonstrate our concern.
Kojokrom. A farming community which was displaced by the
mining operations of the Bogoso Gold Limited now Golden Star
Resources has been resettled near Bogoso in buildings described by
the people as hencoops with land equal to the size of a football
field and the poverty in this community is very visible.
The people of Kojokrom have nostalgia of their old community
where they lived as prosperous farmers and had been disoriented by
the operations of Bogoso Gold Limited, now Golden Star Resources.
Newmont has been screening a documentary on TV stations in Ghana
showcasing some of the good things the Company had done in Kenyase
and its environs as a result of the operations of Newmont's Ahafo
Mine. The documentary showed beneficiaries of Nwemont's vulnerable
programmes, who had been supplied with rice rations.
Kenyase and its environs had been very important areas for
food and cocoa production. The people in the Kenyase area were
self-sufficient in food production before the mining operations
took their lands and for some of the people to become beneficiaries
of food aid to survive after the four years of losing their lands
to Newmont depicts a story of a mourning community since rice is
not the staple food for the area.
Damang was a major food growing area that supplied foodstuffs
to Tarkwa and other major towns in the Wassa West District until
the community was resettled by the Abosso Goldfields Limited, now a
subsidiary of Goldfields Ghana Limited, between a forest reserve
and the company thus denying the community access to land.
In the majority of the cases, farming communities that are
displaced by mining operations are deprived of economic activities
because they are resettled without access to land. The much talked
about alternative livelihood programmes of mining companies had not
been able to restore the lost livelihood of affected people because
of the ridiculous package of the programme. Mining had caused the
displacement of thousands of people.
Goldfields Ghana Limited is recorded to have displaced 30,000
landlords in 5 years and the official records of Newmont Ahafo
Mines indicates that about 10,000 landlords were displaced during
the first phase of the company's operations and by the time the
company completes its second phase operations, a total of 20,000
landlords would be displaced. Some of the communities such as
Atuabo, Akontanse, Osofo Mensakrom were resettled by Goldfields
Ghana Limied at New Atuabo in Tarkwa without access to land.
Surface mining generates a lot of waste, which are dumped on
agriculture lands. The Rock Waste Dump of Anglogold Ashanti
Iduapriem Mine has destroyed large tracts of farmlands of the
Teberebie community and also blocked the community's access to
their farms.
The Rock waste Dump in Teberebire has denied the community
access to land farming. A huge cyanide holding pound of Anglogold
Asanti, Obuasi Mine in Dokyiwa has created scarcity of land in
Dokyoiwa and surrounding communities. A Roaster installed in 1991
by the then Bogoso Billiton Compnay now Golden Star Resources and
removed in 1994, emitted poisonous gases, which destroyed the crops
in communities such as the Bodwire Egya and Ayensukrom No 2.
According to the farmers at Ayensukrom No 2, a research
carried out by the Ministry of Food and Agriculture in Tarkwa in
1992 confirmed that the gas emissions form the roaster was
responsible for the drastic reduction in the yields of their crops
and cocoa.
When the farmers in Bodwire Egya realised the effects of the
gas emissions on their health and farm produce, the farmers
voluntarily abandoned their farms and properties and relocated to
other communities when the Company refused to address their
problem.
Mining communities paid ridiculous compensation to farmers
affected by their operations. For example Newmont made a one-off
compensation payment of seven Ghana cedis to nine Ghana cedis for
one cocoa tree when a cocoa farmer earned between 15 Ghana cedis to
20 Ghana cedis each year from a cocoa tree for its economic life of
40 years to 50 years and also used the cocoa farms to gain Cocoa
Marketing Board Scholarship to support their children education in
high schools. Companies like Chirano Gold Mine paid less than three
Ghana cedis for a cocoa tress as compensation.
Another problem of serious concern is the issues of mining in
forest reserves. Newmont intends to mine in the Ajenua Bepo Forest
Reserve in the Akyem area in the Eastern Region, whiles Chirano
Gold Mines wants to mine in the Tano Suraw Forest reserve. Farmers
living on the fringes of the two forest reserves have expressed
their opposition to the mining operations in the two forest
reserves.
The chiefs and people in the communities around the Tano
Suraw Forest Reserve, where Chirano intends to operate, rejected
the claim that about 80 per cent of the Reserve was degraded. This
was reported in a TV 3 News of April 7, 2003 where the chiefs and
people and challenged the public to go there and verify the facts
for themselves.
Recently, 215 farmers in communities living on the fringes of
the Ajenua Bepo Forest Reserve expressed their opposition to
Newmont's intention to mine in Ajenua Bepo Forest Reserve in a
petition that was sent to the Minister of Lands, Forestry and Mines
and environmental Protection Agency.
The petition of the farmers mentioned that the Ajenua Bepo
Forest Reserve being the highest hill in the area improved rainfall
and thus promoted agriculture in addition to protecting watersheds
of important rivers and for biodiversity protection.
The pollution of rivers through cyanide spillages destroys
the opportunity for communities to use rivers for river-based
livelihoods like fishing and thus depriving communities of meeting
their protein needs. Communities such as Dumase and Teberebie that
had experienced the effects of cyanide spillages had to live with
loss of land in addition to water problems.
WACAM realizes that surface mining is gradually killing
agriculture but the negative effects of mining on the agricultural
sector are completely missing in the discussions of the rising cost
of food prices. If major areas of agricultural production are
gradually becoming areas of net food deficit as a result of the
operations of surface mining companies, then we need to have the
foresight to recognize that we are mining ourselves out of
existence.
The theme for the 80th Anniversary of the Ghana Chamber of
Mines which is the advocacy organization of the mining companies is
"Life without mining is impossible" and the theme did not reflect
on the realities of the destruction of the basic human needs for
survival such as the need for clean air, clean water and good
agricultural lands which mining destroys.
Mining affect the health status of affected communities and
reduces the productivity of farmers. For example, abandoned pits
become breeding grounds for mosquitoes thus increasing the
incidence of malaria in mining communities.
For the mining communities, "Life with mining is Hell".
Mining has a life span while agriculture is in perpetuity. The
nation should consider the long-term consequences of promoting
surface mining, which is inherently unsustainable against
agriculture, which is sustainable. The signs have started showing
and we ignore it at our own peril (end text).