A massive judicial operation following the joint police-military sweep against illegal mining (galamsey) has resulted in the remand of 136 male suspects and simultaneously exposed the critical overcrowding state of Ghana’s correctional facilities.
The suspects, arrested after a violent attack on personnel from the National Anti-Illegal Mining Operations Secretariat (NAIMOS) and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), appeared before the Tafo and Atasemanso Circuit Courts this week. They have been remanded into prison custody and are scheduled to reappear on November 28, 2025.
Mass Remand Stretches Prison Capacity
The sheer scale of the arrests—486 individuals initially picked up across the Ahafo, Ashanti, and Volta regions—has strained the system from the field to the judiciary. After an intensive screening process, 136 were formally arraigned and remanded, all of whom are male.
The judicial action immediately hit a logistical hurdle: Kumasi Central Prisons is operating at beyond its statutory capacity, mirroring the national prison system’s severe congestion, which sits at an occupancy level of approximately 137.7% against its official holding capacity of 10,265 (as of Q3 2025 data).
Consequently, police have confirmed that 132 of the newly remanded prisoners will be transferred from Kumasi to the Sunyani Central Prisons under escort.
This massive operation requires the deployment of two Black Maria vehicles to transport the inmates, underscoring the immediate pressure placed on security logistics by the anti-galamsey enforcement drive.
Context: The National Security Threat of Galamsey
This wide-ranging security operation, which included special dawn raids at sites such as Dadwene, Obuasi, and Anwona (Ashanti Region), Ehi (Volta Region), and Hwediem, Kenyase, Goaso, and Maharni (Ahafo Region), was necessitated by escalating aggression from illegal miners against state officials.
NAIMOS, established as the centralized body to coordinate and lead intelligence-led operations against galamsey, has been charged by the Minister for Lands and Natural Resources to be “firm, resolute, and ruthless” in protecting Ghana’s resources.
This military-grade response comes as galamsey poses an existential environmental threat, with data showing that over 60% of Ghana’s rivers are contaminated, and illegal miners have destroyed more than 4,700 hectares of land in seven regions, including an estimated 40,000 hectares of vital cocoa plantations.
Detained Foreigners and Professionals Released
In a breakdown of the initial sweep, law enforcement confirmed two distinct groups were separated from those remanded:
- Released on Enquiry Bail: A large number of individuals were released after screening, including juveniles, students, teachers, nurses, and other professionals who were mistakenly picked up from their homes. Individuals who were simply travelling and could present verification tickets were also released.
- Foreign Nationals Detained: Separately, 21 foreign nationals who were intercepted while travelling will not be remanded through the circuit court but have been detained and will be handed over to the Ghana Immigration Service (GIS) for specialized processing and possible deportation proceedings. The involvement of foreign nationals remains a significant and complex challenge in the fight against illegal mining.
This coordinated crackdown signals an uncompromising stance from the state, prioritizing judicial follow-through, even as the sheer volume of arrests tests the operational limits of Ghana’s correctional and security systems.
