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== Introduction == | == Introduction == | ||
Rapid proliferation of large-scale mining activity after the privatization of mining industry in Ghana has increased demand for mineralized land throughout the country. Demand for large tracts of land required for large-scale surface mining is causing tensions between multinational mining companies and indigenous groups. Mining companies have gone through the necessary legal channels to secure concessions and should therefore have legal entitlement. But for indigenous people land provides their livelihoods and they have cultural ties to it (Obara and Jenkins 2006: 6)<ref name=Obara>Louise J. Obara and Heledd Jenkins: Land use disputes in Ghana’s mining communities: Developing sustainable strategies. 2006.</ref>. | Rapid proliferation of large-scale mining activity after the privatization of the mining industry in Ghana has increased demand for mineralized land throughout the country. Demand for large tracts of land required for large-scale surface mining is causing tensions between multinational mining companies and indigenous groups. Mining companies have gone through the necessary legal channels to secure concessions and should therefore have legal entitlement. But for indigenous people, land provides their livelihoods and they have cultural ties to it (Obara and Jenkins 2006: 6)<ref name=Obara>Louise J. Obara and Heledd Jenkins: Land use disputes in Ghana’s mining communities: Developing sustainable strategies. 2006.</ref>. | ||
Mining activities in Ghana usually take place in rural areas with high illiteracy | Mining activities in Ghana usually take place in rural areas with high illiteracy rates. Land designated for large-scale mining is often taken from farmers without proper compensation and they have no chance to find another employment, since mining activities do not provide enough jobs to match the total number of people laid off from agriculture. This has led to a deepening of poverty. | ||
In spite of economic benefits resulting from investments in infrastructure – such as roads, schools, hospitals, electricity and water supplies – communities within mine | In spite of the economic benefits resulting from investments in infrastructure – such as roads, schools, hospitals, electricity and water supplies – communities within mine localities suffer from environmental degradation, as well as health problems. | ||
The concentration of mining activities has also resulted in massive migration of all kinds. Some people had to migrate in search of farmland, others were relocated or resettled by the mining companies, while the youth has migrated to the towns, especially Tarkwa, and to the mining areas in search of jobs. The growing displacement of communities has the potential | The concentration of mining activities has also resulted in massive migration of all kinds. Some people have had to migrate in search of farmland, others were relocated or resettled by the mining companies, while the youth has migrated to the towns, especially Tarkwa, and to the mining areas in search of jobs. The growing displacement of communities has the potential to create other social problems <ref>Thomas Akabzaa and Abdulai Darimani: Impact of Mining Sector Investment in Ghana: A Study of the Tarkwa Mining Region. 2001.</ref>. In nearly all cases, mining investment has had a seriously adverse impact on the social organization and cultural values of the people. | ||
== Description of the mining problem from | == Description of the mining problem from a civil society perspective == | ||
===Galamsey=== | ===Galamsey=== | ||
The most problematic land use disputes occur between small illegal miners called galamsey and large-scale mining companies. Small-scale illegal miners<ref> Small-scale mining is primarily a poverty-related activity found in regions | The most problematic land use disputes occur between small 'illegal' miners called galamsey and large-scale mining companies. Small-scale illegal miners<ref> Small-scale mining is primarily a poverty-related activity found in regions where there are few employment opportunities and where education levels are extremely low (Obara and Jenkins 2006: 5).</ref> are mainly individuals operating on plots of land demarcated for other stakeholders, particularly mining companies. This causes conflict, and companies are calling for intervention on the part of the Ghanaian Government. However, the government’s attempts to relocate illegal miners often generate escalated levels of agitation and conflicts and are unlikely to provide a long-term solution to the problem. The Ghanaian Government's policies that focus on promoting the interests of large-scale mining and which further marginalize indigenous mining groups are again fuelling the rapid growth of galamsey communities <ref name=Obara></ref> | ||
=== Environmental | === Environmental damage (contamination of water, land exploitation) === | ||
NGOs as WACAM | NGOs such as WACAM tell us about the problem in various communities, such as the discharge of cyanide and other contaminants from the treatment of the metals extraction into drinking water and the use of land for mining without regard to the needs and development of communities. | ||
===Land devaluation without proper compensation=== | ===Land devaluation without proper compensation=== | ||
This is a widespread problem about which NGOs and civil society organizations have raised their voices and called for government assistance, as well as manage their land and leave them without work environment do not receive adequate compensation and not take into account affected communities in decision-making, which can not have a right advice and are negatively affected in the treatment, leading to social confrontations and discomfort with mining companies. They demand that the mining laws recognise these problems and provide an adequate resolution of the problem. | |||
===Lack of government support=== | ===Lack of government support=== | ||
NGOs | NGOs like WACAM have called for the reform of the mining laws, and for land planning that doesn't destroy the country's food reserves. The NGOs provide information to communities so they know their rights and they work in their favour because the government is not involved enough. | ||
In national forums community representatives and organizations talk about their rights | In national forums community representatives and organizations talk about their rights, they draft reports and they inform of the policies that are taking effect for the Government's part, as it seems some member from the government are also there. | ||
Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) fight for mining reforms. In the Third World's Network Africa has asked for the harmonizing of the existing policies and the adoption of standards on behalf of a series of civil society groups and that they improve cooperation. In turn they have urged the African governments to improve understanding and the quality of the reforms. | |||
Another organization such as EITI is a coalition of governments, companies and civil society groups that establishes global standards of transparency for the oil, gas and mining industries, investors and international organizations. The EITI's rules establishing the promotion of transparency of opportunities at the local level. Publish What You Pay (PWYP) a global coalition of civil society that urges transparency and rendition of accounts. | |||
===Poverty, illiteracy and child work=== | ===Poverty, illiteracy and child work=== | ||
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News from Ghana Mining Portal, available from http://www.ghana-mining.org/ghanaims/SectorNews/NewsArchivesSEP2011/tabid/233/Default.aspx | News from Ghana Mining Portal, available from http://www.ghana-mining.org/ghanaims/SectorNews/NewsArchivesSEP2011/tabid/233/Default.aspx | ||
{{License cc|Juliána Kováriková, Jaime Gracia Pueyo, | {{License cc|Juliána Kováriková, Jaime Gracia Pueyo, Eva Gil Mansilla}} |
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