Africa 88 (4) 2018: 863–66 doi:10.1017/S0001972018000505
Mining gold in Ghana: debate
10,000 miners, 10,000 votes: politics and mining in
Ghana
Samuel Aniegye Ntewusu
Introduction
In their article ‘Governing access to gold in Ghana: in-depth geopolitics on
mining concessions’, Luning and Pijpers (2017) discuss important political
issues around mining in Ghana. Using the companies Keegan and Newmont as
units of analysis, and drawing on insights from geography and anthropology,
the authors call for an alternative approach to geopolitical issues in mining.
They point out that mining concessions are sites of governance that involve eco-
nomic players – that is, mining companies and artisanal miners/galamsey – and
political authorities positioned at national as well as local scales (ibid.: 761). Of
greater interest, the authors argue, is the kind of relationship that has developed
between established exploration or mining companies and galamsey operators.
The authors point out that the maintenance of such a relationship, though
uneasy, is necessary in ensuring continuous mining in the areas where these
mining companies are located.
This commentary focuses on an aspect of the article that deals with the issue of
galamsey. Drawing on historical events, I discuss some key characteristics of arti-
sanal mining and miners and the issue of hybrid governance, involving traditional
and modern authorities in mining in Ghana.
Galamsey in historical context
Galamsey, a corruption of ‘gather them and sell’, has long been a main method of
extracting gold and other minerals in Ghana. From the precolonial period to the
present, galamsey operators have been requesting land from chiefs or traditional
rulers for their mining activities. In earlier times, the recognition given by chiefs
to people who engaged in such mining, and by people to chiefs when giving
them a share of whatever mineral was mined, was a way of minimizing conflict.
The introduction of colonialism and later the attainment of independence grad-
ually changed these relationships. From the first decade of the 1900s, some
notable signs of control of galamsey operations emerged. First, the defeat of
Samuel Aniegye Ntewusu is a research fellow at the Institute of African Studies, University of
Ghana, and is an affiliate research fellow at the Centre for Gender and African Studies, The
Free University, Bloemfontein, South Africa. Email: santewusu@ug.edu.gh
© International African Institute 2018
Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. University of Ghana, on 19 Jun 2019 at 09:39:14, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use,
available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0001972018000505
864 Samuel Aniegye Ntewusu
Ashanti in the Yaa Asantewaa war of 1900–01 encouraged the British to venture
into the interior of Ghana (at that time called the Gold Coast). Earlier reports of
travellers and missionaries about gold, such as those by Bowdich (1873) and
Ferguson (see Arhin 1974), among others, interested the British who sought to col-
onize the interior for purposes of exploiting its natural resources. Britain’s interest
in this goldwas also a result of the closure of some South African mines during the
Anglo-Boer war of 1899–1902 (Lentz and Erlmann 1989).
These two factors influenced and facilitated the gradual takeover of mining
from the chief/galamsey partnerships. Prior to the Minerals Ordinance of 1936,
which vested ownership of all minerals of the Gold Coast in the Crown, Joseph
Chamberlain, in his confidential dispatch of 7 February 1902, had already con-
ferred these mineral rights to the British Crown.1 Correspondingly, from 1902
to 1936 there were several European mining firms that started prospecting for
gold in Ghana,2 normally on lands that ranged from 26,000 to 72,000 square
feet in size and included various geological features such as rocks, bare ground
or rivers.3 The 1936 Ordinance, which followed about three decades after
Chamberlain’s dispatch and at a time when European companies were already
entering the mining scene, further enabled the colonial administration, rather
than chiefs, to grant concessions – and these were to mining companies rather
than galamsey operators.
The gradually increasing domination of these companies led to tensions
between chiefs, colonial administrators and mining companies. Chiefs, under-
standably, did not take kindly to these developments.4 Fearing that gold mining
by European companies would endanger the steady flow of royalties to their
coffers (Ntewusu 2018), they set more store by their existing ties to galamsey
operators than by new ties to companies supported by the colonial government.
After colonialism, the post-independence Ghanaian state failed to take into
consideration these pre-existing, and long-lasting, relationships. On the contrary,
the new constitutional arrangements gave the government more control than
before over resources and mining rights and sometimes concessions were given
by the government without the consent of the chiefs. These developments partly
account for the readiness with which chiefs gave land to galamsey miners: it was
part of a political/mining challenge through which they intended to win back
their earlier role as owners of the land. As Luning and Pijpers point out in their
article, the contemporary organization of gold mining confirms the lasting
importance of local authorities as they team up with gold miners to govern sites
(2017: 771).
1Public Records and Archives Administration (PRAAD), Tamale, NRG 8/23/24, ‘Minerals’,
1942.
2PRAAD, Tamale, NRG 8/23/10, ‘Prospecting rights (Gold Coast Selection Trust)’, 1938–41.
3PRAAD, Tamale, NRG 8/8/23/9, ‘The Minerals Ordinance’, 1938; PRAAD, Tamale, NRG
8/23/16, ‘Application for prospecting rights’, 1938; PRAAD, Tamale, NRG 8/23/17, ‘Exclusive
prospecting licence’, 1938–41.
4PRAAD, Tamale, NRG 8/23/21, ‘Exclusive prospecting licence, Dokrupe’, 1939.
Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. University of Ghana, on 19 Jun 2019 at 09:39:14, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use,
available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0001972018000505
Mining gold in Ghana: debate 865
War without results: political talk and the reality of mining on the ground
In June 2017, several print and electronic media carried a story about the ‘declar-
ation of war’ on galamsey operators by the government of the Republic of Ghana.
In the words of President Nana Akuffo-Addo: ‘I understand the galamseyers say if
I want to go by the dictates of the law, they will vote against me and my party the
NPP at the next elections’ (Takyi-Boadu 2017). The president is aware that miners
have a deep suspicion of politicians’ propensity to see them as nothing more than
‘votes’. This fear of electoral loss is evident in the case of Newmont: ‘the company
cannot easily ask the government to remove all these people, because they
represent 10,000 votes. Moreover, considering the artisanal miners’determination
and conviction that they have the right to mine, forbidding artisanal mining would
create serious tensions in the mining areas’ (Luning and Pijpers 2017: 771–2).
Attempts to crack down or ‘wage war’ on miners have a boom and bust
element, a temporal dynamic. Shortly after a president is elected he will crack
down on galamsey, but, in campaign time when he needs the miners’ votes
again, he will be more tolerant. In 2017 it was time to crack down, but moving
towards elections in 2020 we can predict that the president will tone down his rhet-
oric about galamsey. The same modus operandi was deployed by the National
Democratic Congress (NDC) government in 2013. After winning the elections
in 2012 it got tough on Chinese miners in 2013–14, but it completely backed
down in 2016, the year of the next election. In sum, the reality is that the
alleged problem of galamsey will be very difficult for Ghana to solve. It is
deeply woven into many aspects of Ghana’s current reality: from the prevalence
of Chinese trade partners, through the importance of small-scale mining in creat-
ing jobs in a country suffering from high youth unemployment, to the allegedly
close relations between criminal networks and regional police (Burrows and
Bird 2017). The stated concern of the president and other Ghanaian actors,
including the media, which formed a ‘coalition against galamsey’, was galamsey’s
destructiveness to the environment. The mining operations are said to destroy or
pollute water bodies, and the chemicals, such as mercury and cyanide, that are
used to extract gold are harmful or deadly. Galamsey has also been linked to
various forms of crime, including armed robbery, money laundering and prostitu-
tion. Since the declaration of the ‘war on galamsey’, the joint military and police
operations have seized mining equipment from galamsey operators, and there have
been several arrests and prosecutions. However, a critical evaluation reveals that
the environmental rhetoric was mainly used to gain public sympathy for a ‘war’
whose rationale is more complex and multifaceted. In the first place, the declar-
ation of ‘war’ diverted attention from the fact that, over the years, officials in
the Ministry of Land and Natural Resources, the Ministry of Environment and
the Minerals Commission had been unable to regulate mining in Ghana. The sub-
sequent use of the armed forces and the police against galamsey similarly reflected
the weakness of institutionalized mining regulation in Ghana. Furthermore, a key
fear of the government was that labour had been diverted from farming into arti-
sanal mining, a factor that, it was reasoned, could have negative consequences for
food security. Finally, an increasing number of farmers were selling their cocoa
plantations to galamsey miners. Given that cocoa is one of the country’s major
export commodities, this meant that, without a crackdown on gold mining,
Ghana would be losing out as a major cocoa supplier in international trade.
Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. University of Ghana, on 19 Jun 2019 at 09:39:14, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use,
available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0001972018000505
866 Samuel Aniegye Ntewusu
In sum, artisanal mining, as Luning and Pijpers point out, is directly linked to
politics in Ghana. The fear of losing votes in elections normally causes govern-
ments to ease up on galamsey operations. This has indeed been the case for
several years in Ghana. In the run-up to elections in 2020, the president will
need the miners’ votes again and this will certainly temper his anti-galamsey dis-
course. This dynamic of boom and bust makes it difficult to have a consistent strat-
egy towards small-scale mining. But it is essential for the government to return to
the communities and engage with chiefs and galamsey operators. The examples
given by the authors, regarding Newmont and Keegan and their relationships
with the galamsey, show how various forms of coexistence are negotiated. As
their article reveals, artisanal miners are not completely powerless, and, in the
miners’ eyes, the primary authority is not the president or the state-backed
company, but the chief.
Acknowledgements
I would like to acknowledge the financial contribution from the research project ‘Society
and Change in Northern Ghana: Dagomba, Gonja, and the Regional Perspective on
Ghanaian History’.
References
Arhin, K. (1974) The Papers of George Ekem Ferguson: a Fanti official of the gov-
ernment of the Gold Coast, 1890–1897. Leiden: African Studies Centre.
Bowditch, T. E. (1873) Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee, with a
Descriptive Account of that Kingdom. London: Griffith & Farran.
Burrows, E. and L. Bird (2017) ‘Gold, guns and China: Ghana’s fight to end
galamsey’, African Arguments, 30 May , accessed 24 April
2018.
Lentz, C. and V. Erlmann (1989) ‘Aworking class in formation? Economic crises
and strategies of survival among Dagara mine workers in Ghana’, Cahiers
d’Études Africaines 29 (113): 69–111.
Luning, S. and R. J. Pijpers (2017) ‘Governing access to gold in Ghana: in-depth
geopolitics on mining concessions’, Africa 87 (4): 758–79.
Ntewusu, S. A. (2018) ‘A social history of gold mining in Bole, northern Ghana:
from pre-colonial to recent times’, Transactions of the Historical Society of
Ghana 17 (2015–17): 1–26.
Takyi-Boadu, C. (2017) ‘War on galamsey deepens’, Modern Ghana, 18 June
,
accessed 18 September 2018.
Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. University of Ghana, on 19 Jun 2019 at 09:39:14, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use,
available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0001972018000505