The joint taskforce against illegal mining, also known as galamsey, has stated that their aim is not to arrest individuals involved in the menace but rather to prevent them from engaging in the illegal activities.
According to the Commander of the Operation Halt Task Force, Col Eric Tenadu, the taskforce’s primary mission is to restore the rivers to their original states.
“At the end of the day, that is our aim. If all of them stop these activities on the water body and we come and our water is clean, the aim is not to come and arrest somebody. We are just asking that they should stop doing that activity on the water body. And so if they willingly stop, I think we should be grateful for that,” he said.
Speaking to JoyNews’ Maxwell Agbagba, who was on the ground with the taskforce as they destroyed mining equipment on the Birim River, Col Tenadu said that the taskforce’s actions have already sent a strong message to illegal miners.
“We have been able to send the message that we wanted to send across. I think the message has gone round and they clearly have our message. And so most of them moved their items and things before we even got there," he said.
He declared an unwavering campaign to eliminate illegal miners from Ghana's water bodies, pledging to continue their efforts until the polluted rivers are fully restored.
“In all, we were able to destroy about 18 chanfans that were on the water body and then about 10 machines, water pumping machines also on the water body. This is an effort to help bring back the colour of our water body and so it will continue.”
Col. Eric Tenadu stated that the taskforce, which includes fully armed soldiers, is committed to patrolling every water body in the country to confront and halt those engaged in illegal mining.
“Just like I said, today is the first day, tomorrow will continue but then I'm unable to tell you where we are going tomorrow. When it's time, I'll let you know but for now, all that I can say is that we are going to all the water bodies and we have started from Brim.
“Tomorrow, we'll go to another location and then we'll continue until we cover all the water bodies in the country and hopefully, we want to see a change in the colour of our water bodies,” he added.
Latest Stories
-
Appeal Court judge slams weak enforcement of Land Act as land disputes dominate court cases
32 minutes -
Police arrest two suspects for robbery at Ashaiman
32 minutes -
Fire ravages apartments, stores at Akyem Kwabeng
38 minutes -
Tano Anwia’s concession owner teams up with Forestry Commission to combat galamsey
2 hours -
Gov’t allocates GH₵490m to Education Ministry
2 hours -
Tragedy: Nigerian boxer dies after Ghana Pro League bout
2 hours -
Opoku-Agyemang undergoes treatment at UGMC, set to receive further care abroad
5 hours -
The mystery of Bomigo: an island of divine laws, sacred goats, and unwavering traditions
7 hours -
Government’s GH₵ 292.4 million mistake: why free sanitary pads are the problem, not the solution
7 hours -
Crystal Palace beat Fulham to book FA Cup semi-final spot
16 hours -
Forest beat Brighton on penalties to reach FA Cup semi-final
16 hours -
MTN FA Cup 2024/25: Berekum Chelsea book semis slot with win over Bechem United
17 hours -
Gov’t promoting galamsey with GoldBod; the GoldBod is galamsey board – Minority
17 hours -
Ghana Navy probes suspected pirate attack on fishing vessel
18 hours -
2024/25 FA Cup: Attram De Visser stuns PAC Academy to reach first-ever semifinal
18 hours