It was gathered that at least 27 illegal miners were buried
alive in their pits at Obuasi in the Ashanti region on Wednesday March
20, 2013 during a joint operation by the National Security outfit and
the Ghana Armed Forces, aimed at destroying and sealing off illegal
mining pits in the area.
The trapped miners were however rescued in the dawn of Friday March
22, 2013 with the help of their colleagues who first suspected the
entrapment after the military c*m national security operation.
Secretary to the Small Scale Miners Association in Obuasi, Rufus
Borry alleged on Wednesday in an interview with XYZ News that “some of
our colleagues were buried alive by the National Security Operation”.
The rescued miners looked weak and pale.
They had been trapped in the belly of the earth for more than 48 hours.
Rufus Borry who confirmed the rescue of the trapped miners to XYZ
News said the exercise was done with the help of officers from the Ghana
Armed Forces and the Bureau of National Investigations.
He however expressed concerns that a few of the miners could still be trapped in the belly of the earth.
Soldiers stormed some mining towns in Obuasi on Wednesday with
bulldozers and other heavy earth moving equipment and machines to seal
off all illegal mining pits without warning, according to Mr Borry.
The National Security-led operation angered scores of the small scale miners, who poured out on the streets to demonstrate.
Four of them were shot as they protested on the streets.
The Obuasi Police Command confirmed to Journalists at a press
briefing on Thursday March 21, 2013 that three of those shot escaped
from the Bryant Mission Hospital where they had been taken for
treatment.
The other was transferred to the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital for further treatment.
Mr. Borry told XYZ News that the Security Agencies had earlier told
the local miners that the operation was meant to target only illegal
foreign miners, mostly the Chinese.
He therefore expressed surprise at the turn of events.
The exercise formed part of the Government’s attempt to flush out illegal miners (Galamseyers) from Ghana.
The Director of Public Affairs at the Ghana Armed Forces, Col
Atintande M’bawini told Obuasi-based Time FM on Wednesday that as part
of measures to ensure that illegal miners don’t return after they had
been flushed out, the joint exercise had adopted a strategy of staying
and mounting surveillance in areas where they have crippled the illegal
mining activities.
He noted that: “The intention is not to kill people; it is just to stop the incidence of illegal mining”.
He however warned that those who resist will be arrested adding that:
“In some place where they carry offensive weapons, off course if you
fire at us we’ll fire back at you, there’s no big deal about that”.
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