NDC government enabling galamsey through Goldbod – Afenyo-Markin

Minority Leader Alexander Afenyo-Markin has accused the NDC government of enabling illegal mining, alleging that its decision to allow the Gold Board (Goldbod) to purchase gold from small-scale miners effectively finances galamsey activities.
Commenting on the 2026 Budget before Parliament on Thursday, November 27, Afenyo-Markin said the government’s posture shows it has “surrendered” to illegal mining rather than fighting it.
“This government has surrendered to the galamsey activities. This government has become its enabler,” he stated.
He argued that the budget’s announcement empowering the Gold Board to buy gold from small-scale miners contradicts the government’s claim of combating illegal mining. According to him, the move provides state endorsement for unregulated mining operations.
“In this budget, the government announced the Gold Board to purchase gold from small-scale miners. They are not fighting illegal mining. The NDC government, through the Gold Board, is rather financing it. This is giving it state endorsement,” he said.
Transitioning to the impact on personnel fighting illegal mining, the Minority Leader noted that members of NAIMOS continue to face danger while the government looks on, recalling the eight lives that were lost when travelling to launch a programme aimed at combating galamsey.
“Today, members of NAIMOS are getting hurt, dead, shot at in a fight their own government has abandoned. Eight lives were lost on their way to launch a programme to fight illegal mining,” he lamented.
Afenyo-Markin further criticised the government for failing to demonstrate the seriousness and commitment needed to end illegal mining. He contended that setting up a Gold Board to buy gold that cannot be traced to miners who cannot verify, only fuels complicity rather than enforcement.
“Today, their own government is demonstrating neither the seriousness nor commitment necessary to defeat it. Instead, it has set up a Gold Board to buy gold it cannot trace, miners it cannot verify, in a system designed for complicity rather than enforcement. If this government cannot trace the gold, it must not buy the gold,” he stressed.









