This Saturday on Newsfile, Ghana faces a three-front test: can agriculture pull thousands from the mine pits; will enforcement hold when officers come under fire; and are those entrusted with public revenue finally being held to account?
Ghana’s rice sector is at a crossroads. A domestic paddy glut estimated in the region of over a million tonnes in storage has left farmers squeezed and markets clogged.
Policymakers and agribusiness leaders are now pitching rice expansion not just as an economic fix, but as a strategic alternative to illegal mining: scale up irrigation, mechanise milling, and create viable rural livelihoods so young men and women no longer see galamsey as their best option.
The plan sounds straightforward, but the barriers are real processing bottlenecks, credit gaps, storage rot and value-chain weaknesses. Can rapid, targeted interventions convert a glut into a national solution for disenfranchised mining communities, or will rice remain a talking point while the pits keep calling?
On the enforcement front, NAIMOS operations are increasingly fraught. A recent joint mission that included EPA teams and working journalists in the Obuasi-Afari corridor was violently repulsed by illegal miners, forcing a tactical withdrawal and leaving several personnel injured after a chaotic road incident.
The assault underlines a worrying trend: enforcement teams face not just resistance, but organised, armed pushback that threatens the rule of law. With NAIMOS reporting large seizures of heavy equipment and successive raids across Ankobra, Aboso, and Wassa corridors, the question is now tactical: does the state have the logistics, intelligence, and political will to secure enforcement, protect officers, and put an end to the supply lines that fuel illegal mining?

And on accountability is CHRAJ’s recent finding against the former Commissioner-General. The commission concluded procurement breaches that it says cost the state close to GH¢9 million and has recommended prosecution while imposing a five-year bar on holding public office.
This is part of a larger accountability sweep that includes the NSS and NSB-linked cases now feeding into ORAL and other recovery efforts, a bunch of scandals that together put billions of cedis at issue and test institutional resilience.
Join Samson Lardy Anyenini and his guests this Saturday at 9 a.m. on JoyNews and MyJoyOnline as we analyse these issues.
Newsfile airs live on the JoyNews channel on digital satellite channels 421 on DSTV and 144 on GoTV, and streams on JoyNews’ Facebook or YouTube channels on Saturdays from 9 am to noon.
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