Accra, 16 September, 2025 / 8:55 pm (ACI Africa).
Ghana’s Catholic Bishops have reiterated their concern about the spread of illegal mining in the country and urged the government to declare a state of emergency in “mining zones” as a step toward addressing the perennial challenge that has attracted condemnation from other Church institutions.
In a Monday, September 15 statement, members of the Ghana Catholic Bishops’ Conference (GCBC) describe the illegal and unregulated mining, commonly known as Galamsey, as “cancer” which they say has currently become one of the gravest afflictions in the West African nation.
Galamsey, the Bishops say, “ravages our rivers and forests, poisons our soil, endangers public health, corrupts governance, erodes our moral fibre, and extinguishes livelihoods.”
“This is not a routine challenge to be managed with half-measures; it is a national emergency requiring decisive, extraordinary response,” GCBC members say, and add, “We therefore urge the President and his government to declare, without hesitation, a state of emergency in the most affected mining zones and around endangered water bodies.”
A declaration of the state of emergency, they continue, “would empower extraordinary interventions: curfews in volatile areas, the securing of devastated lands, the dismantling of entrenched criminal syndicates, and the halting of corrupt administrative complicities. The scale of the crisis justifies nothing less.”






