7000 acres of Keta Lagoon given to Kensington Industries limited |
By
Duke Nii Amartey Tagoe
It
has happened again! The pillage goes on and on. The Keta Lagoon in the Volta
Region has been handed over to a salt mining company for $30,000 (Thirty
Thousand Dollars).
The deal between the Ghana Minerals Commission and
Kensington Industries Limited of India, will enable the company grab 7000 acres
of the entire lagoon whilst 300metres at the periphery representing 3 percent
(3%) of the lagoon will be left for the local salt miners.
What is worse, the company has departed from the agreement
it signed with the Minerals Commission to use sea brine for salt production and
has resorted to the use of surface water and underground pool by means of pipes
and very huge pumping machines.
It has also emerged that long before Kensington Industries
Limited was granted a licence to mine salt in the Adina-Denu area, it had
already encroached on lands belonging to the neighboring communities in
flagrant violation of the Mineral and Minning Act.
Babulal Goud, New MD, Kensington Industries Limited |
In a letter dated 18th
November 2009 addressed to the elders of the Dogbekope Community , Rajesh
Mehte, a director of the company, “acknowledged having encroached on their
lands unlawfully without having been granted a licence. We apologise and withdraw immediately.”
Janet Aglodo, a salt miner said “the fresh water, that used
to flow from Togo into the lagoon, bringing in fish in the rainy season has
been blocked by roads and dams constructed by the company. As a result the
annual fishing and salt winning seasons that used to bring relief to the people
have become a thing of the past since the lagoon dries up prematurely.”
An immovable fishing input on which fish traps were laid in
the lagoon and which served as roosts and breeding grounds for water birds has
been destroyed.
“It is highly unthinkable and we would have thought that by
now the government, which we massively support and rally behind, would have
made a statement. How can this government apportion the Keta Lagoon to
foreigners to the neglect of his own subjects and indigenes who derive their
entire livelihood and very existence from the lagoon” said Cynthia Gali of the
of the Ketu-Keta Salt Winners Association.
Mr Pascal Lamptey, MCE, Ketu-South |
Pascal Lamptey, Municipal Chief Executive (MCE) of the Ketu
South Municipal Assembly has confirmed that the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) failed to undertake a proper environmental impact assessment before the
license was granted to the company.
He revealed that Kensington Industries Limited reneged on
its promises to provide some infrastructure for the area as part of its
corporate social responsibility and that has led to mistrust between the two
parties.
Mr Lamptey said as a representative of the President of
Ghana in the area, his most crucial obligation is to ensure that investment was
brought to the area and jobs are created for the teeming youths.
According to him the government seeks to relegate
under-development to the past by encouraging foreign investment in places that
production was low for rapid growth. He said he has set up a sensitization
committee to help the community and the company co-habitate with each other,
leading to what be believes would bring about “peaceful development.”
That assertion by the Municipal Chief Executive has
however been challenged by the National
Coalition on Mining of the Third World Network (TWN). The coalition has
expressed shock at the displacement and the destruction of the livelihood of
more than three thousand eight hundred and ninety eight people (3898) in one
single swoop.
The TWN contends that the major task and expectation of the
Kensington Industries Limited is to make super profits for its shareholders
back home by the use of cheap labour and wondered how the local people will
benefit from this deal.
In a letter dated 25th January 2010 and addressed
the Managing Director of the Kensington Industries Limited, Kofi Tetteh,
Principal Sectoral Planning and Policy Officer of the Ghana Minerals Commission
stated that the Commission has “favourably recommended to the Minister of Lands
and Natural Resources to grant you a fifteen year licence to mine salt in the
Keta Laggon”
ASP Naa Atolgo Agbogne |
ASP Naa Atolgo Agbogne at the Agbozome District Police
Command has confirmed the arrest of some sixteen people in the recent clashes
between the company and the youths of the area on the 2nd of
December 2015.
According to him, such disturbances by the youths had halted
operations of the company and had rendered it incapable of producing for a very
long time. He wondered how the company could meet its corporate responsibilities
in the area when they were being prevented from doing business.
The sixteen local salt miners are languishing in jail at the
Keta Divisional Divisional Command whilst another receiving treatment for
bullet wounds at the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital has been chained to his bed to
avoid escape as he awaits prosecution.
Editorial
Something Is Wrong
The
Afienya Youth Leadership Training Centre was perhaps the first of its kind
It
was established as a collaboration between the National Youth Council (NYC) and
the Frederich Neumann Foundation of the then West Germany.
The
centre was to train young people in animal husbandry, crop farming,
blacksmithing, building construction and other areas of interest.
After
graduation, the products of the centre were to be encouraged to form
cooperatives around the country to provide employment for themselves and young
people in their communities.
The
graduates were also seen as stimuli to accelerated rural development.
So
far about nine of such institutions have been established throughout the
country over a period of about 42 years.
The
sad thing is that these centres are collapsing as a direct result of lack of
funding.
However,
how can we say that we have a serious commitment to
fighting youth unemployment when we allow these institutions to collapse?
Who
will save the Youth Leadership Training Centres?
Something
is definitely wrong!
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