Galamsey: If mining laws fail, civil disobedience will salvage damage – KNUST UTAG

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The President of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) chapter of the University Teachers Association of Ghana (UTAG), Professor Eric Abavare, has proposed civil disobedience as the solution to combat illegal mining, commonly referred to as galamsey.
In an interview with Citi News, Prof. Abavare expressed concern over the ineffective enforcement of Ghana’s mining laws, arguing that if the current legal framework has proven inadequate, civil disobedience could be the key to addressing the issue.
He also cautioned that without immediate action, the threat posed by illegal miners could escalate significantly in the future.
“This call for me is not even banning, but I really call for civil disobedience. That is the only way we can salvage the situation because the laws don’t work anymore not that the laws are not good but I think the goodness of the law is its ability to solve the problem and so if the problem still persists, then it tells you that the laws are weak and inefficient and so one key thing is we need to scrap the law and I know many will disagree.
“But that is the only way because a key component of the law, which is the kings and the chiefs, who are supposed to be made culpable, I don’t know whether they are factored in there.
“And so the person [illegal miner] goes to the concession, he goes to the king, and then the rules are all in the concession. But the king, who is the mastermind, I don’t know how he is treated in there. And so we feel that for the laws to be effective and potent, the factors of the kings are crucial.”
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