Residents of communities within Asanko Gold Mines catchment areas in the Amansie South District in the Ashanti region, are seething with, amidst escalating tension, following Wednesday dawn attacks by some unidentified soldiers who raided the area.
The soldiers, numbering over 200, including some private security men wearing reflectors, stormed communities, such as Tontokrom, Datano and its surrounding mining sites in the early hours of Wednesday, February 21, 2024, at about 5am to intimidate the residents and also burnt down some mining equipment.
They were said to have been brought to the area in about seven vehicles – two buses and five military pick-ups, with the soldiers wielding offensive weapons.
The communities with over 50,000 residents are largely miners who are for some time now, desperately pushing for descent jobs through government’s community mining flagship programme and locked horns with Asanko mines over a small parcel of concession.
Even though discussions on the raging dispute between the residents and Asanko Mines are far advanced to have it resolved amicably, following some ongoing interventions by government, it remained unclear, who ordered the military deployment to the area.
Leader and spokesperson for the resident, Kwabena Aniomunyam, addressing the media, said the conduct of the Asanko mines and those who sanctioned the military action, was regrettable, but the community would not relent on its quest for jobs, unless they kill them.
He said “Going forward, if soldiers come here, all the town folks will storm the site where the soldiers lodge so that if they want to kill all of us, they do so”, he said, adding “This is the repeated call we have been making, but government is adamant. It is rather interested in giving the Canadians and South Africans, the listening ear and they have been tormenting us with soldiers from time to time.”
“We are asking government and Ghanaian leaders that are Amansie South district people, not Ghanaians too? Every time we demand something from the government, we do not get it.
As indigenes from Tontokrom and the adjoining communities numbering about 20 towns who have been voting, we have been denied our share of the national cake.”
Kwabena Aniomunyam said, “Our main job is mining, so we have embraced government’s Community Mining programme, so that we can have something to do. So why are we being denied the Community Mining programme, but Asanko that is made up of Canadians and South Africans, are telling us that they will not allow us to do our work? They are always intimidating us with soldiers.”
He cautioned that, failure by the authorities to establish Community Mining programme for the residents, they would also not take part in this year’s December 7 election and would also not allow campaign activities in the area.
“The about 20 communities will not allow them to campaign and we will never allow Asanko to work here,” he cautioned.
Mr Aniomunyam, who is also the Unit Committee Chairman of the area said, “We are begging the NPP government that Amansie South is NPP stronghold, we do not want a situation where on Election Day, our MP and government will be voted against. We are pleading with the NPP, even as residents when we ask for our share of the national cake, we do not get it.”
He pleaded with the government saying, “The land is huge, they should give a portion to us to do the mining so that Ghanaians can have something to do so that Asanko too can have the remaining vast land.”
According to him, “It was the government that initiated ‘One District One Factory’ even that, we have none [here]. If the Community Mining can replace that, we will be fine with it. If they are failing to do that, but will allow soldiers to intimate us then they are just destroying the area and its people. If they want to destroy the towns too, they should tell us”.
Sounding frustrated, Kwabena Aniomunyam said “We are telling leadership of this country that one day, we shall storm the site with our families to face them so that they kill us, so that all will know that NPP has destroyed it. We voted for the NPP to come and help us, to give us jobs, now the jobs are there but you have given it to foreigners and they are intimidating us on our own land. We will not agree to this.”