To say radio/TV news/pictures of Konongo, Asante-Akyem District, on the Founder’s Day Holiday, Monday, September 22, 2025, and indeed throughout the week were apocalyptic, might not be an exaggeration.
The heart-wrenching account on Joy FM had it that food, water, soil, and even air in Konongo, have been heavily contaminated with poisonous heavy metals like lead, arsenic, cyanide and mercury by galamseyers.
While mercury vapour floats in the air into human lungs, the highly contaminated soil is so toxic it poisons the skin/body on contact.
Incidentally, Konongo/Asante-Akyem is one of Ghana’s breadbaskets, “exporting” yams, cocoyams, plantains, tomatoes, onions and fruits to other parts of Ghana, particularly Accra. Indeed, during the week, large quantities of onions and tomatoes were bought by the government from Konongo for distribution to second-cycle schools.
As I asked myself if we are on a full-blown deliberate ecocide mission, my mind went back to my article exactly a year ago in September 2024, titled “Self-destruct button pressed?” It read:
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- Galamsey took centre-stage, with news/harrowing pictures from all over Ghana. The latest galamsey entrants are women at Talensi, Upper-East Region.
- In Parliament, an MP told his opponents, “you polluted the water more than us.” This reminded me of the Nigerian author Nkem Nwankwo whose 1975 novel was titled “My Mercedes-Benz is bigger than yours.” Here, your destruction of our water-bodies is “bigger” than ours, so we have done no wrong!
- A Joy FM report on 5 September 2025 said, a galamseyer incredibly, approached a chief to sell him part of River Ankobra.
- O’Reilly SHS/AAMUSTED – There was a fatal stabbing to death of an 18-year-old student of O’Reilly SHS by a classmate when an argument over whose father was richer went ballistic! In Kumasi, a final-year student of the Akenten-Appiah –Menka-University-of-Skills-Training-and-Entrepreneurial-Development (AAMUSTED) was stabbed to death.
In my December 2021 article titled “Digging our own graves,” I stated as follows.
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Digging our own graves
In his opening address at the UN Climate Conference COP-26 in Glasgow, Scotland on 1 November 2021, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres had very strong words for the 197 nations, particularly the developed/industrialised world.
COP, informally the “Earth Summit,” stands for “Conference of the Parties,” where “Parties” refer to the nations that agreed to a new environment pact, UN Framework Convention on Climate Change at a meeting in 1992. COP-1 was in Berlin in 1995.
The UN Secretary-General stated that,
“The six years since the Paris Climate Agreement (COP-25) has been the hottest on record. Our addiction to fossil-fuels is pushing humanity to the brink. We face a stark choice - either we stop it, or it stops us. Enough of brutalizing biodiversity, killing ourselves with carbon, treating nature like a toilet, burning, drilling and mining our earth deeper. WE ARE DIGGING OUR OWN GRAVES!”
In Ghana, “galamsey” has degraded our forests/lands, polluted rivers and poisoned underground water with chemicals like cyanide. Children have dropped out of school to do illegal mining, with drug-usage and prostitution resulting.
In recent times, environmentalists have sounded alarm-bells about destroying Nature’s biologically diverse ecosystem of the Atiwa Forest, a veritable source of drinking-water for Ghana, just to allow foreigners to mine manganese.
Are we deliberately pressing the self-destruct button for our current gain at the expense of future generations who have to import drinking-water? Are we proving UNSG Antonio Guterres right that, “we are digging our own graves?” Antonio Guterres’ words “we are digging our own graves “may have been directed at the world’s leading polluters, the developed world.
In Ghana however, “galamsey” and its attendant cross-cutting evils like depleting our forests, poisoning of both surface and underground water, and children dropping out of school into armed-robbery and prostitution, amount to “digging our own graves.”
If we allow it as DRC has, foreigners will help us “dig our own graves.” Therefore, let us fix Ghana and live home as respected citizens, not as disrespected second-rate immigrants/citizens elsewhere.
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Discussion
On Tuesday, 3 Sep 24, TV showed the stabbed 18-year old student of O’Reilly SHS being carried to LEKMA Hospital where he was pronounced dead. Why would an unnecessary and intellectually bankrupt argument over whose father is richer, instead of concentrating on the SSCE examinations they were writing, degenerate into a stabbing incident leading to death? Sadly, it points at our loss of values/societal decadence, where money is all that matters, irrespective of the source.
That same night on TV, an MP fired at his opponents saying, “you have polluted the water more than us!” Telling the MPs they knew those involved in galamsey, the Speaker stated, “Desist from galamsey!” But, is that all?
After Otumfuor’s destoolment of three chiefs, is the Police taking any action?
Commenting on the damage to our environment, Founding Director of the Environmental-and-Sanitations-Studies of the University of Ghana, Professor Chris Gordon said, the damage done to the environment cannot be restored in his lifetime. He added that, we have mortgaged the future of our children.
On his part, Professor Kwasi Aning of the KAIPTC stated that, galamsey has assumed trans-national proportions with Chinese, Nigeriens, Burkinabes, Nigerians, Malians and their oversea-backers all actively destroying Ghana’s environment.
During the week, the 2019 clip of the Chinese Ambassador’s questions was played many times. He asked
1. Who gives Chinese visas to come to Ghana?
2. When they arrive at the Accra International Airport, how do they get to the galamsey sites?
3. How come Chinese do not go to South Africa which has more gold than Ghana to do galamsey? Answering it himself, he said it is because SA citizens will not allow it. We embrace it! Additionally, how does the heavy equipment move from the port to the mining areas?
I concluded my recent article titled “Legacy! Legacy! Legacy! saying,
“The American essayist Ralph Waldo Emerson said “what you are, shouts so loudly in my ears, I cannot hear what you say about yourself!”
Holy Child School, Cape Coast has for its motto “Facta, non verba,” which means “Action, not words!” Unfortunately, Ghanaians have coined “No Action, Talk Only (NATO) as our current situation.
On 31st August 2024, Ghana-Water-Company-Limited attributed the current water crisis in the Central Region, particularly Cape Coast, Elmina and their environs to galamsey, resulting from inadequate water at the Sekyere-Hemang Water-Treatment-Plant! “Treated-mud” only produces water loaded with heavy-metals.
In the words of anti-galamsey-crusader-journalist Erastus Asare Donkor, galamsey is the result of failed leadership. “Galamsey” is a national disgrace! Galamsey is a dishonorable legacy! Have we become an “Esau-Republic” selling our birthright/existence to foreigners for diseases/extinction? How low we have sunk!
Meanwhile, MPs want to have blaring Police riders clearing us lesser mortals off the road for them as we suffocate in traffic, instead of addressing the crisis.”
Has the self-destruct button been pressed? Remember UN Secretary-General Guterres’ warning on environmental-degradation saying, “we are digging our own graves! Either we stop it, or it stops us!”
Comments
So, what has changed?
Last week, the president was busy at the annual September UN General Assembly meeting in New York . He may therefore not have had time to read my article titled “Ghana Catholic Bishops Conference and galamsey.” The conclusion is therefore reproduced below for him.
“On Monday September 15, 2025 Ghana Water Company Limited (GWCL) shut down its Headwater plant on the Ayensu River at Kwanyako, Central Region. Designed to produce 35 million gallons of water/day, the unthinkably high turbidity level of the muddy water, the result of galamsey upstream in the Eastern Region, had made impossible water treatment.
Commenting on the president’s response, the GCBC stated, “this is profoundly troubling. The hour is late. Delay is betrayal. Now, not tomorrow, not later, is the time to act!”
Mr President, how many treatment plants have to shut down with accompanying deaths/diseases/destruction before a targeted state-of-emergency becomes an option? You know the old English proverb “a stitch in time saves nine!” You know the Biblical saying, a good name is better than silver/gold! You know also Geoffrey Chaucer’s quote in The Canterbury Tales, “Radix Malorum est cupiditas,” ie greed/the love of money is the root of all evil. Finally, why has the promised repeal of LI 2462 become an intended amendment now?
GRIDCO is the latest target of galamseyers as they dig under concrete foundations holding electricity masts in place. Indeed, they shot at GRIDCO maintenance workers in some areas!
Leadership, lead by Example/Integrity! Fellow Ghanaians, WAKE UP!
The writer is a former CEO, African Peace Support Trainers Association, Nairobi, Kenya and Council Chairman, Family Health University,
Accra Email: dkfrimpong@yahoo.com
