Accra: Air Commodore David Anetey Akrong, the Commandant of the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre (KAIPTC), has described illegal small-scale mining, popularly known as galamsey, as an existential threat to Ghana's survival. He warned that the menace had evolved into a national crisis with grave implications for the country's environment, economy, and human security.
According to Ghana News Agency, speaking at the 'Reflections on Security Series' seminar held at the KAIPTC in Accra, Air Commodore Akrong highlighted the widespread degradation of forests, pollution of rivers, and destruction of arable lands. These issues have placed Ghana's water security, public health, and sustainable development at serious risk. The seminar, themed 'Galamsey as an Existential Threat to Ghana: A Call for Reflection and Action,' gathered policymakers, academics, security experts, civil society organizations, and media practitioners to address the multi-dimensional challenges posed by illegal mining and to explore collaborative strategies to curb it.
Air Commodore Akrong stated that illegal mining has transformed from a livelihood activity into a deeply entrenched network of organized criminality involving corruption, money laundering, and the exploitation of vulnerable populations. He cautioned that, if left unchecked, these dynamics threaten not only the sustainability of the country's natural resources but also the legitimacy of governance institutions and the stability of local communities.
He cited the contamination of major water bodies such as the Pra, Ankobra, Birim, and Offin with toxic chemicals like mercury, cyanide, and arsenic as evidence of the alarming scale of environmental destruction. The Commandant emphasized that entire communities are at risk, and the siltation of reservoirs is jeopardizing access to potable water for several towns and cities, highlighting the crisis's far-reaching public health consequences.
Galamsey has triggered a silent public health emergency, contributing to kidney diseases, respiratory ailments, birth defects, and the spread of waterborne and vector-borne diseases across mining communities. The threat extends beyond environmental degradation, as illegal mining is now intertwined with transnational criminal networks facilitating illicit financial flows and the smuggling of industrial equipment and weapons, potentially fueling broader insecurity.
Air Commodore Akrong commended successive governments for their interventions, including the establishment of various committees and operations aimed at tackling illegal mining. However, he admitted that the persistence of illegal mining pointed to deeper governance and institutional challenges. Participants examined how illegal small-scale mining had become a magnet for both local and foreign actors, driven by lucrative returns and weak enforcement mechanisms.
Experts at the seminar interrogated several key issues, including the true extent of illegal mining, its existential threat to the nation, the effectiveness of response mechanisms, and reasons behind the limited success of past interventions. Discussions also focused on identifying realistic, actionable measures that could galvanize cooperation between state and non-state actors to stem the tide.
Air Commodore Akrong reiterated that as a Centre of Excellence in research, training, and policy dialogue, the KAIPTC remained committed to providing an open and trusted platform for constructive engagement on national and regional security challenges. He expressed optimism that the deliberations would generate actionable insights that contribute meaningfully to the fight against illegal mining.
The seminar formed part of KAIPTC's ongoing 'Reflections on Security Series,' a platform designed to promote open and evidence-based discussions on complex national and regional security challenges. It brought together stakeholders from academia, civil society, the media, the security services, the extractive sector, and traditional authorities.
