Forest Invasion; CSOs sue government, want mining licences of NPP officials, others suspended

Sika Togoh
Sika Togoh
9 Min Read

Six civil society organisations and an individual have filed a lawsuit at the Accra High Court seeking to stop persons or companies that have been granted licenses to mine in forest reserves in Ghana under the Environmental Protection (Mining in Forest Reserves) Regulations, 2022 (L.I. 2462).

The plaintiffs—A Rocha Ghana, Nature and Development Foundation, Civic Response, Ecoconscious Citizens, Kasa Initiative, Tropenbos Ghana, and Dr Ken Ashigbey— filed the interlocutory injunction on September 18, 2024.

They want to prevent these companies from mining before the court decides on their substantive case, which is an order for the revocation of LI 2462—the law regulating mining in forest reserves.

The suit seeks for “an order restraining any person or entity, to whom mineral rights, licences, or leases and or environmental permits have been issued by the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, or 4th Defendants/Respondents for the undertaking of mining activities in forest reserves, from undertaking any such activities, pending the final determination of the substantive suit.”

The defendants include the Minister for Environment, Science and Technology, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Minister for Lands and Natural Resources, the Minerals Commission, the Speaker of Parliament, and the Attorney-General.

Their suit follows an investigation by The Fourth Estate that revealed the identities of officials of the incumbent New Patriotic Party (NPP) and government appointees who are scrambling for mining licences in Ghana’s forest reserves. The owners of some of the companies that have obtained these licences include the mayor of Ghana’s second biggest city, Kumasi, Sam Pyne and a Parliamentary Candidate for the NPP in Juaben, Francis Owusu-Akyaw.

The Ashanti Regional Chairman of the NPP, Bernard Antwi Boasiako, the District Chief Executive of Wassa East, Emmanuel Boakye, and the NPP’s Women’s Organizer in the Western Region, Angela Bint Ntaama, including a presidential staffer, Harriet Kyeremanteng, all have companies whose licences are waiting ministerial approval to mine in forest reserves.

The Fourth Estate’s investigations revealed that since 2023 at least 10 companies have been granted mining leases to mine in 11 mining forest reserves. Four of the companies are to operate in globally significant biodiversity areas.

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