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General News of Thursday, 14 May 2020

Source: atinkaonline.com

Don’t choose V8, Board Chairs and Visas over natural resources - NGO to Chiefs

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The Executive Director of SETTLE Ghana, Mr. Abu Karimu, has made an appeal to traditional authorities, in the areas where natural resources are found, to desist from accepting gifts and offers such as V8 vehicles, Board Chairmanship positions, conference meetings, and Visas as conditions for giving away God-given resources.

Settle Ghana is a non- governmental organisation that defends the rights of indigenous people and also championing the dreams, hopes and aspirations of Indigenous People of Ghana to live a fair and a dignified life.

The lead advocate for indigenous people rights, Mr Abu Karimu, made the call when he spoke to the media in Bole.

Mr Karimu said the right to give consent to a company’s proposed project is not a sole discretion of a Chief and his cabinet but rather for the entire community as clearly stated in the United Nations (UN) Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People as well as the International Labour Organisation (ILO) Convention 169 which is the major binding international convention concerning indigenous peoples and tribal peoples, and a forerunner of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

The Executive Director of SETTLE Ghana said before accepting gifts from will be companies coming to your lands, ask yourself, how will the impact of their operations on my great-grandchildren.

Mr Karimu reminded some Chiefs that the gifts do not last beyond ten years but their negative impact on the water, environment and livelihoods of their people is everlasting.

Mr Karimu further explained that if Chiefs take their time and do due diligence and follow the necessary protocols and informed consent principle, they and the entire communities can make much money in terms of royalties that they are by law entitled to.

The SETTLE Ghana Director said indigenous people in the country mostly sit on gold, bauxite, diamonds, manganese, palm trees, lakes and forests yet about 80% of indigenous people live on less than a dollar a day.