Mr George Mireku Duker, Deputy Minister for Lands and Natural Resource

Government has launched six community mining schemes in “galamsey” endemic areas of the country to address the issue of illegal mining.

The schemes, which are being rolled out in six mining areas in the Western, Ashanti and Eastern Regions of the country, are expected to enable willing persons to mine in a responsible manner and create 10,300 direct and 21,000 indirect jobs.

Deputy Minister for Lands and Natural Resources, George Mireku Duker announced this at the regular Meet-the-Press session organized by the Ministry of Information in Accra on Wednesday.

According to him, government is sanitising the extractive sector of the country with the introduction of the community mining scheme, which paves the way for the commencement of regulated, responsible, and sustainable community mining, aimed at helping to get rid of illegal mining.

“We are creating community mining schemes to hold onto those who will be moved out of the illegal mining and to cushion them as well. So far, we have created these schemes in six (6) mining areas of the Western, Ashanti and Eastern Regions. The schemes are intended to provide livelihoods for members in the mining communities, promote sustainable and responsible mining and therefore prevent illegal mining,” Mr. Duker reiterated.  

He said community mining has become the main fulcrum around which the nation seeks to organise responsible small-scale mining.

Mr Duker explained that it is the reason government has developed a Small Scale and Community Mining operational manual to guide the operations of small-scale miners.

Mineral Development Unit at ADB

Mr. Duker also disclosed that government as part of efforts to continuously support relevant players within the mining sector and ensure that small scale miners have access to credit facilities for their operations, has established a Minerals Development Unit at the Agricultural Development Bank (ADB).

This, he said, will help tackle the issue of operational capital as the lack of credit facilities for small-scale mining operators has been identified as one of the driving forces behind foreigners’ involvement in the small-scale mining space.