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Monday December 12, 2022

 

The Ghana Gold Rush, as seen on television

 

E. Ablorh-Odjidja

October 29, 2012

 

If no official of the government of Ghana saw “The Jungle Gold Rush” series that was shown on the Discovery Channel television, starting October 26, 2012, we suggest the government order copies for them to view now.

 

The show was about the abundance of cheap gold in Ghana, depicted in such an embarrassing manner that it must require the immediate attention of the government's action.

 

Historically, Ghana has been a major source of the world’s gold supply.  Gold, while lucrative to the economy, has also damaged Ghana to some extent.  It was gold that brought the first Europeans.  Names like the Gold Coast and Elmina were the verbal footprints left from the gold rush of earlier times.

 

That rush was centuries ago. This time, it is the Chinese that is heading the rush, along with the shoddy environmentally destructive small-scale gold mining practice called Galamsey. 

 

The “The Jungle Gold Rush” television series presents a tragedy.  It is about profit-seeking adventurers, ruthlessly wasting and wrecking the environment in Ghana, while at the same time robbing locals of the job enrichment opportunities reserved by law for Ghanaians.

 

Out of this show comes the depiction of the Chinese attitude of impudence, aggression, and assault on our sovereignty, including disrespect for the locals.  This must be a major concern for any sensible government that cares for its people. 

 

The protagonists are two male characters from Utah, USA, who are broke, in debt, and in need of an enterprise with the potential for a quick profit. That was when Ghana and gold prospecting as a business came to their mind. 

 

With that as a business plan, they were able to raise capital in the US for a mining concession in Ghana.

 

They arrived in Ghana only to find out that the claim they thought belonged to them was now being worked on by a gang of armed Chinese!

 

How both the Americans and the Chinese managed to acquire any claims, and on what visas or licenses to operate as small-scale miners in Ghana, should be the troubling questions for the government to consider.

 

That our government should be oblivious to our historically copious resource of gold is one thing.  But it is completely another matter for it to hand over the same resource to foreigners to siphon this wealth away. 

 

The lesson is there for government officials, directly or remotely connected to the industry.  They must learn that the world already knows at this late date in the 21st century that we haven’t learned much from our history. 

 

The Chinese have gone wild, operating brazenly in fields that ought to be the preserve for locals, while village chiefs cower in fear!

 

“Behind every illegal Chinese operator, we are looking at an opinion leader, a chief, a farmer, a landowner or somebody who then sublets it to the Chinese for these illegal activities,” an official from the Ghana Chamber of Mines said to Voice America.

 

The Americans in the documentary are only two and almost absent in the country's entire small scale gold mining industry.  Comparatively, the Chinese are in the hordes; despoiling farms, environments, and communities alike, with nothing else in mind other than to find as much gold as they can.

 

Outside prospecting for gold, there is not a single enterprise in Ghana where their presence and dominance are not felt. 

 

They are the dominant force in civil engineering and the construction industries. Highway projects financed by the American government for Ghanaians have even gone to the Chinese.  The substantial financial and peripheral benefits from these funded projects drained right out of Ghana to China.

 

The Chinese have also a hold on the future of our little oil finds because the finds are already mortgaged for debts owed to them.  Ghana now is depended on the Chinese for vararious commodities and imports.  The purchases come in the form of labor, expertise, and material supplies which go to compromise Ghana's industrial ability to compete.

 

And as if all the above are not enough, the Chinese are now on our farms, destroying lands that once used to be long-term profitable cocoa farms to operate short-term extractive small-scale mining operations. 

 

“As global gold prices climb amid economic uncertainty in Europe, Ghana is facing an influx of illegal small-scale miners from China … The operations are raising concern over environmental damage ….” Bloomberg News reported.

 

"The easy influx of foreign miners was due to lax industry regulation; which to those who know means the controllers are “paid” to look the other way."

 

In the Ashanti region recently, 101 Chinese minors, were found at a galamsey site and were detained by the police in Ghana. One of them died.  No one asked what Chinese minors were doing so far from home, or who brought them to Ghana and how?

 

The Foreign Affairs Minister of Ghana, Alhaji Mohammed Mumuni, when confronted with the query, had only a sketchy response.

 

He said, “In some areas, there is some kind of unholy alliance between some of these aliens and our citizens,” and that “we need to work hard to stamp it out,” Bloomberg News reported on September 20, 2012.

 

In the case of the 101 Chinese minors, the Chinese government had a robust concern.  It allowed the Ghanaian public to know her concern.

 

It said to entire Ghana, the Chinese government “will be closely monitoring the situation to ensure correct treatment of its nationals by the Ghanaian authorities..” and “has requested that the rights and safety of the detainees are observed; while also encouraging the Ghanaian government to punish those found guilty, and to compensate those found to be innocent victims.”

 

Suddenly, one illegal small-scale Chinese miner is dead in Ghana and he becomes an innocent victim. Was there a similar reaction from this Chinese government for the thousands of her citizens who were murdered at the Tiananmen Square rising of 1989 - - on citizens, who had only come to protest for justice?

 

The Chinese show more concern for its illegal citizens in Ghana but none for the damage these abusers of rights cause in villages and farms in Ghana with their unlawful mining activities. And galling still is the fact that the same Chinese government would never tolerate any of the abuses inflicted here by its citizens, or any other, back at home in China.  The retributions there, like those exhibited in Tiananmen Square, would be brutal.

 

But in Ghana, the same Chinese government sees nothing wrong with its citizens behaving badly in the mining sector.  It is even brash enough to issue open threats to our government.  They advocate for them to stay and continue the abuses.

 

But how difficult or complex is it for Ghanaian officials to detect illegal mining activities in our villages?  

 

It should be easy until you find out that official inaction may have been induced by corruption.  There is some money to be made by looking the other way, starting with visa issuances, and licensing operation certifications.

 

Meanwhile, our farming regions are being traumatized in the face of the government’s inaction.

 

Dr. Dominic Dobbin, the District Health Director from the region where the 101 Chinese illegal operators were, described foreign Galamsey operators as a menace to health.

 

He said, “Various health facilities in the area have recorded about three hundred teenage pregnancies…. high abortion cases while HIV/AIDS in the area are on the increase….” because of the Galamsey menace.

 

Dr. Dobbin attributed teenage pregnancies and abortion cases to Chinese Galamsey operators. “They had more money to spend and they “go about chasing small girls.." he said.

 

These are problems that must worry our government first, regardless of threats from China.

 

The Chinese, like all exploiters, are only interested in what they can extract from Ghana to send back to China, while our government looks on idle, immobilized to act in its interest because of the huge Chinese loans already taken.

 

As embarrassing as watching the documentary was, we should hope that the same embarrassment would force our government to act early to save us from being the laughingstock of the world.

 

E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher www.ghanadot.com, Washington, DC, October 29, 2012.

 

 

Permission to publish: Please feel free to publish or reproduce, with credits, unedited. If posted on a website, email a copy of the web page to publisher@ghanadot.com. Or don't publish at all.


 

 

 

 

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