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Ghana's Extractive Industries: Follow De Beers' Botswana Partnership Model

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  • BJ 11 years ago

    Our leaders must, indeed, work on this exploitation by the so-called Western partners who are practically inhumane. I hope NDC will ensure that more prudent measures will be put in place to make sure future pacts with any for ...
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  • Concerned Ghanaian 11 years ago

    That was exactly what Nkrumah started by building the University of Mines. Ghana was supposed to be refining our gold dust into gold ingots for export. When the atrocious coup of 1966 happened,the obnoxious UP/NLM/Matemehu fi ...
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  • wassa 11 years ago

    abaa Ghana ships Gold bars [or gold ingots] as you call it and not gold dust please? What is wrong with you?

  • C.Y. ANDY-K 11 years ago

    Yes, we'd get good deals with those vampire foreign investors if we have informed and sensible leaders, being advised by knowledgeable experts. We can't say that's the case at the moment.

    Upon all the consultations and int ...
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  • C.Y. ANDY-K 11 years ago

    Here is the article.

    Feature Article of Friday, 21 2012

    Columnist: Kwawukume, Solomon
    The Jubilee Fields: Losses Suffered By Ghana

    Fellow Ghanaians, while you celebrate your X’mas and New Year festivities, just po ...
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  • joey london! 11 years ago

    This is the most useless free masons piece of shxxt I have ever read!Let them adopt De Beers' Botswana partnership model now!kwaseeeaaaaa gh,was always the he and not the mooo!

  • STEVE 11 years ago

    This is a highly productive article highlightening how Ghana can enjoyably benefit from its natural endowment of resources, oil and gas to be precise.

    A comparison was made here for Ghana to emulate what Bostwana has been ...
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  • C.Y. ANDY-K 11 years ago

    Steve,

    Your point is taken but Ghana doesn't need to reserve the gas and oil until we learn how to mine them ourselves. Had we adopted the Production Sharing System and certain conditions like Nigeria did, it'd still have ...
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  • Blaque Marque 11 years ago

    Oh brother where art thou? WHat a beauty that you have laid bare all that we need to know.
    The article upon which your comment was made had a good intention but you hav also made us understand better, that there is an even b ...
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  • T. 11 years ago

    Thank you Kofi.

  • Big Joe . belaruss, ukraine , russia 11 years ago

    Welcoming topic . this topic must be taken seriously and address by new government.Becos time has change. I repeat time has change. Gone are the days when Europeans scramble for Africa
    But in Ghana its looks strange that in ...
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  • KP 11 years ago

    Some education will help. Ghana gets: Corporation tax-35%, Participating interest-10%or15%, and Royalties and social environmental responsibility-10%. Totalling 55% or 60%. This is true to the extractive industry as a whole. ...
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  • Mumuni 11 years ago

    Great Article and I have been talking about how Ghana is being short-changed with Extractive Industries for a long time now.
    Our leaders are useless. Ghana used to have 50 or 49% of the Ashanti Gold mines but Sam Jonah and ...
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  • NII LARTEY NARTEY 11 years ago

    Until we do away with all the unscrupulously dishonest crook "woyomenized" politicians who have turned our noble country into a safe havens of criminals and our people criminal worshipers, the De Beers model won't work here i ...
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  • Sankofa 11 years ago

    Why should we rely on the goodwill of foreign companies to develop our extractive industries?

    Why should we not extract our own minerals, oil and gas and process them? What prevents from so doing?

    The mantra that we nei ...
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