Categories: News

Illegal Mining: Farmers Buy ‘Pure Water’ To Mix Chemicals for Spraying Farmlands – Prof. Ansah

The Co-Principal Investigator on the University of York-UG’s Galamsey Research Team has said that illegal mining, also known as galamsey, is having adverse effects on farming in many communities across the country.

Speaking on Newsfile on JoyNews on Saturday, Prof Gladys Nyarko Ansah revealed that some farmers in Atiwa West in the Eastern Region use sachet water to mix pesticides and other agrochemicals to spray their farm.

She explained that this is because the water bodies in the area are no longer safe for consumption.

“The people are not happy with the situation…it is very sad. Farmers have to buy pure water to go and mix chemicals, weedicides, agro chemicals and things to spray their farms in Atiwa West,” Prof Ansah noted.

She also disclosed that in some cases, farmers are threatened to sell their lands to illegal miners to continue their activities.

Prof Ansah said that “people’s cocoa farms are left hanging because galamseyers have dug around all the farm and they can’t even have access to the farm.”

“They tell you that when the galamseyers come and tell you ‘sell your land to us to mine’ and you refuse, when you sleep and wake up, they have dug around your farm and then you have no option but to sell that farm to them very cheaply,” she said.

She stated that as a result, farming then becomes unattractive to many people.

Prof Ansah added that “in a country where we have a large number of young people who are unemployed and they can’t even see farming as an alternative, they (could) just jump onto the galamsey bandwagon.”

She explained that when the youth are all involved, it becomes difficult to control illegal mining activities, especially in areas where it is happening most.

Prof Ansah was speaking on Newsfile on the topic, “how to win the fight against illegal mining”. This comes after news broke about the re-arrest of the ‘galamsey’ kingpin En Huang, popularly known as Aisha Huang.

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