play videoPresident Akufo-Addo and John Dramani Mahama
Samuel Abu Jinapor, the Minister of Lands and Natural Resources, has responded to former president John Dramani Mahama over recent claims that Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo was interfering with investigations on illegal mining.
The said allegation was contained in a Facebook post Mahama authored in the wake of Akufo-Addo's statement at an event in Koforidua that Akonta Mining Limited was not engaged in galamsey (illegal small-scale mining) anywhere in the country at the time he was speaking.
In the said post, Mahama made reference to the minister having asked for a probe into the allegations against the company, which is owned by Ashanti Regional Chairman of the ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP).
In a response posted on social media, the minister explained that the president did not speak relative to Akonta Mining's activities as alleged but to the present realities.
He also stressed that work was still ongoing with respect to the allegations at the level of the police and the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP).
"The President was speaking about the state of affairs at the time he made the comment, and went ahead to add that Government, through the Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources and the Forestry Commission had, with the assistance of the military, cordoned off all Forest Reserves in the country, and rid them of illegal mining activities at the time he was speaking, and that Government was working to ensure that the situation remains permanent
"The comments by the President in no way relates to past or future activities of Akonta Mining, and cannot, by any shred of imagination, be deemed as exonerating the company from any past activities or interfering with any ongoing investigations," his post read in part.
Read his post below:
Dear President Mahama,
I have read, Sir, with utmost dismay, your Facebook post regarding the comments made by the President of the Republic, H.E. Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, in Eastern Region, when he addressed the 28th National and 16th Biennial Congress of the National Union of Catholic Diocesan Priests’ Association (NUCDPA).
Ordinarily, I would have no need to respond to matters you post on your Facebook page. But, due to the gross misinformation and political spin contained in the said post, as well as the attempt to disparage my integrity and that of the President in respect of this matter, as Minister responsible for Lands and Natural Resources, I deem it necessary to set the records straight. My response will, therefore, focus on the facts, and I will endeavour not to respond to the political spins contained in the said post. The unimpeachable facts relating to this matter are as follow:
1. sometime last year, there were allegations levelled against Akonta Mining Ltd that it was engaging in some mining activities in the Tano Nimiri Forest Reserve;