Member of Parliament for the Manhyia North Constituency in the Ashanti Region, Hon Collins Owusu Amankwah has jumped to the defense of Senior Minister, Yaw Osafo-Maafo saying he was right with his comment about the deportation of ‘Galamsey Queen’, Aisha Huang.
According to him the question posed on the senior minister to him is a “Bogus question which deserved a bogus answer” and therefore people of Ghana should not crucify the Senior Minister because he did no wrong.
The Chairperson of the Government Assurance Committee in Parliament, Collins Owusu Amankwah speaking in an interview monitored by thepressradio.com explained that the Attorney-General was clothed with law to file a nolle prosequi in court to discontinue any case without disclosing the basis or reason for the discontinuation, adding that it was not the first time a trial involving a foreigner had been truncated in Ghana.
The Senior Minister, Yaw Osafo-Maafo has come under heavy criticisms following a comment he made about Chinese illegal mining ‘queen’ En Huang, popularly known as Aisha.
Aisha, who was arraigned in Ghana in 2017 for engaging in illegal small-scale mining at Bepotenten in the Amansie Central District in the Ashanti Region, was later deported in December 2018 by the government.
Commenting on the development at a recent town hall meeting organised by Ghana’s government abroad, Mr Osafo-Maafo said: “We have a very good relationship with China. Today, the main company that is helping develop the infrastructure system in Ghana is Sinohydro, it is Chinese Company. It is the one that is going to help process our bauxite and provide about two billion dollars to us.”
The Minority in Parliament is set to trigger Article 82 of the 1992 Constitution to remove the Senior Minister, Yaw Osafo-Maafo from office.
The group says the Senior Minister’s comment suggesting Chinese illegal miner, Aisha En Huan’s prosecution was discontinued in exchange for the Chinese $2 billion Sinohydro deal is disgraceful.
But Collins Owusu Amankwah described minority call as unacceptable.
“As a responsible minority you don’t need to call for the head of the Senior Minister because NDC government gave Aisha Huang the name Galamsey Queen” during their regime. “He chided.
Hon Collins OwusuAmankwah comments was in reaction to some comments reported to have been made by Mr Yaw Osafo-Maafo, the Senior Minister, at a Town Hall Meeting in the United States recently, which has been interpreted by critics to mean that the jailing of Aisha Huang would not serve the interest of the nation, considering the good relations between Ghana and China, especially with regard to the Sinohydro deal.
The Senior Minister’s comments have attracted wide public condemnation from the public, especially from members of the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC), demanding for an apology or resignation of the Senior Minister.
The Government on Thursday said Aisha Huang, a Chinese national, who was being prosecuted for engaging in illegal small-scale mining, was not deported in exchange of the two-billion-dollar Sinohydro Bauxite Agreement for infrastructural development.
MrKwakuAsomah-Cheremeh, the Lands and Natural Resources Minister, addressing a news conference, in Accra, said it was not only Aisha who was deported; but 194 other foreigners since the imposition of the ban on ‘Galamsey’ in 2017, as part of efforts to restore sanity to the system.
They included Nigerians, Burkinabes, Malians and Chinese, “We did not sacrifice Aisha Huang or exchange her for the Sinohydro loan,” he explained.
“This lady was in Ghana prior to the arrangement we made with the Chinese Government to secure the financial assistance from them.
“And no government official thought of shielding or pampering her in one way, or the other so that she can perpetrate the illegal mining she was found to be doing in Ghana,” the Minister said.
Giving an update on measures the Government had put in place to prevent the continued pollution of the water bodies by illegal miners, the Lands Minister said 220 mining guards had been trained at the Ghana Police Training Academy to be deployed soon to the various mining communities to maintain sanity in the sector.
So far, about 300 excavators have been confiscated from illegal miners; while some Ghanaians and foreigners are standing trial in various courts across the country.
The World Bank, Mr Asomah-Cheremeh said, had pledged to support the Government with 100-million-dollars towards the implementation of the Multi-Sectoral Integrated Mining Project.
In line with this, the Deputy Minister of Lands in-charge of Mining was in France to sign the necessary documents to secure the funds.
The Government lifted the ban on small-scale mining in December 19, last year, and asked all certified small-scale miners to register their concessions and equipment with the Minerals Commission and the Inter-Ministerial Committee Against Illegal Small-Scale Mining.
Source: Thepressradio.com/Louis Gyamerah