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31.08.2015 Business & Finance

Mine workers Intimidate To Bring Industry To Halt

By Adnan Adams
Mine workers Intimidate To Bring Industry To Halt
31.08.2015 LISTEN

The Ghana Mine Workers Union is threatening to bring the mining sector to a standstill if the current huge disparity between wages of locals and expatriates are not addressed.

According to the miners, they will use their right to collective bargaining to demand their due.

The union has been crying foul about the current trend, insisting most underpaid locals have better capacity and training than their foreign counterparts.

“Government used to say that the mining sector income gap may distort the economy, but the reality is that this sector employs less than one percent of the work force in the job market. So why wouldn’t we have the situation where we get people to be paid good money to pay their taxes then we grow the mining economy, “ the general secretary of the Miners Union, Prince William Ankrah lamented.

In an interview with journalists, he insisted the miners would ensure the trend would be reversed.

“We have collective bargaining to correct the internal mess and we will use that muscle to deal with it. If we raise the issue and it’s not getting the right attention, we have many strategies … if they don’t come clean we will bring the mining sector to a standstill,” William Ankrah charged.

In another development in the mining sector, the Ghana National Association of Small Scale Miners has warned there could be a massive increase in the illegal menace popularly known as galamsey, following what it describes as an astronomical increase if permit fees by the Environmental Protection Agency, EPA.

Addressing critical issues bothering the industry at a news conference, the association said EPA's permit fees has been increased from Ghc750 to $2,400 an equivalent of Ghc9,600.

The association said the new fees will clearly be a disincentive to miners who were not already turning up to register when the fees was much less.

Executive Director of the Association, Emmanuel Yirenkyi, says the new fees may only end up encouraging illegal mining.

"We are going to see a very astronomical increase in illegal mining activities in this country. You were charging 750 cedis and they were not willing to come so how do you now charge $2,400? It's like you are just sacking them away. And those in the sector are also not going to come because its more or less a disincentive to us".

Meanwhile the association has also called on government to immediately review the activities of the Inter-ministerial Task Force against Illegal Mining.

The association accused the taskforce of extorting monies from its members whose operations have been regularized by the Minerals Commission. The miners lamented the president's purpose for setting up the Task Force was being defeated.

Describing them as extortionists, the General Secretary of the Small Scale Miners Association, Godwin Armah, said the taskforce goes round brutalizing members who have regularized their activities with the Minerals Commission while those perpetuating illegal mining are left off the hook.

The General Secretary called for an immediate halt to their operations and a review of their mandate.

"They go to various sites charging and taking monies from people, confiscating and seizing people's equipment without even consulting the Minerals Commission especially when areas that are blocked out are only known by the Minerals Commission so there should be a collaboration with the Task Force and the Minerals Commission. The miners should also keep their licenses on site so that when the Task Force go their sites they can show it to them".

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