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Ghana's Galamsey Crisis: Bishops Demand State of Emergency Amidst Environmental Devastation

Published 12 hours ago1 minute read
Pelumi Ilesanmi
Pelumi Ilesanmi
Ghana's Galamsey Crisis: Bishops Demand State of Emergency Amidst Environmental Devastation

Ghana is grappling with a severe national crisis driven by illegal mining, locally known as galamsey, which is devastating the environment, threatening public health, corrupting governance, and eroding the nation's moral fabric. The widespread pollution of major rivers like the Pra, Birim, Ankobra, Offin, and Ayensu, with some registering alarmingly high turbidity levels, along with the destruction of vast forest reserves and farmlands, has pushed the country to an existential brink. Beyond environmental damage, galamsey poses grave health risks, including increased cases of cancer, kidney failure, skin diseases, and neurological disorders due to toxins such as mercury entering the food chain. The social toll is equally profound, with children abandoning education for dangerous mining pits and communities facing violent conflicts.

In response to this escalating crisis, the Ghana Catholic Bishops’ Conference (GCBC), alongside the National Catholic Laity Council (NCLC), has intensified calls for decisive action, urging President John Mahama to declare an immediate state of emergency in the most affected mining zones. The Catholic bodies describe galamsey not merely as an environmental or economic challenge but as a “moral and spiritual crisis” and a “cancer in the national soul,” emphasizing that it constitutes a profound betrayal of humanity’s duty to care for creation and is a

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