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Projects Abroad Human-rights Office

Rhetoric and Reality – Update Report on Human


Rights Abuses in the Mining Community of
Anwiam, Obuasi
May 2010

View of Anwiam from an abandoned mine/Ryan Slade (27/05/10)


Contents

Introduction p3
Background p4
AngloGold Ashanti p6
Examples of AngloGold Ashanti‟s cooperate responsibly policies p7
AngloGold Ashanti Values p8
NGO Concerns about AngloGold Ashanti Operations p9
Summary of the Current Situation in Anwiam p10

Four Areas of Major Concern p12

1. Access p13

2. Property Damage P14

3. Flooding and Water Pollution p15

4. Health Care p17

Transcript of Interview with Village Spokespersons p18

Recommendations p25

References p26

Report complied by Franck Martin, with Projects Abroad Human Rights Office
additional research by Maja Skjoldevald, Koi Street H/No F/100A/2,
Ryan Slade, David Martyn, Marlow Svatek, Osu-Ako Adjei Adjei,
Ghana
Angela Meng, Amie Dobinson, Thea
Bainbridge and Brioni Aston.
Rhetoric and reality - PAHO report on the mining community of Anwiam

Introduction

Since June 2009 Project Abroad Human Rights Office (PAHO) has been
monitoring the actions of AngloGold Ashanti (AGA) in the Obuasi mining
area of the Ashanti Region of Ghana. During this time, we have grown
increasingly concerned that the actions and policies of this company are
having a detrimental impact on the human rights of the local residence living
in the Obuasi area.

On March 24, 2010, a team of PAHO volunteers visited the residents of


Anwiam on a fact finding mission. The community informed the team that
mining activity has rendered their village uninhabitable. They attributed the
problems in their village to the mining activity of AngloGold Ashanti (AGA).

The areas of greatest concern resulting from mining activity included:

1. Inadequate road access following a decision by AGA employees to


forbid the residents of Anwiam from entering their private property,

2. Significant property damage due to blasting activity by AGA,

3. A lack of clean and safe drinking water,

4. A rise in malaria cases and abnormal skin conditions coinciding with


the commencement of mining activity in the surrounding mines.

PAHO returned to Anwiam on May 27, 2010, and discovered the situation
had actually deteriorated.

Their findings from these visits are outlined in the following report. It also
contains background information on the Obuasi mining region and the AGA
mining company. It concludes by presenting a series of short term and long
term recommendations to address the issues outlined in this report.

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Rhetoric and reality - PAHO report on the mining community of Anwiam

Background

In recent years, the Ghanaian government has facilitated an economic shift from reliance upon the
agricultural sector to the promotion of the mining sector above all other sectors. The government offers
generous incentives for foreign investment in the extractive sector. Despite the potential positive effects
that the mining industry may have on communities, it also has many negative effects on the livelihoods
and employment of Ghanaians, particularly farmers.

The farming communities displaced by mining companies are resettled without access to land, thus
depriving them of economic activities. The farmers are often given inadequate compensation in return for
their displacement and loss of livelihoods. In particular, surface mining is detrimental to agricultural lands
and, thus, the food supply. Although agriculture is sustainable, surface mining is not.

Nana Boafo, chief of Anwiam, stands next to a collapsed building/PAHO (24/03/10)

Within mining communities, there is a lack of Alternative Livelihood Projects (ALPs) for the youth, who
often resort to illegal mining for employment. These illegal artisanal miners are called Galamseys. In
order to curb illegal mining, formal education and training for employment outside of the mining sector is
necessary.

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Rhetoric and reality - PAHO report on the mining community of Anwiam

Development projects are needed to improve the relationship between mining companies and the
communities in which they operate. Such projects may include providing road access to the villages,
educational programs and scholarships for the youth, ensuring access to clean drinking water, repairing
transportation links and building medical clinics. All mining companies should have Community
Relations Departments that maintain contact with members of the community regarding their concerns.

The start of the access route available to the residents of Anwiam /Ryan Slade (27/06/10)

In addition to affecting livelihoods, mining has a serious impact on the health of community members.
The health problems most frequently found in these communities include tuberculosis, malaria and
typhoid.

Abandoned mining pits result in stagnant pools of water where mosquitoes breed and this contributes to
the high prevalence of malaria in mining communities. Air pollution causes respiratory infections. Often,
those in mining communities must travel long distances to get clean drinking water. Since much of the
ground water is polluted, there is also a high rate of water-borne diseases such as typhoid.

The issues outlined within this report have been ongoing for many years. The Commission on Human
Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ) published a detailed report on the human rights violations
within the mining sector. The State of Human Rights in Mining Communities in Ghana (2008) outlined
CHRAJ concerns about the purity of water; growing levels of pollution; rising health problems; property
damage from blasting; safety and security concerns; relocation disputes; and compensation discrepancies.i

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Rhetoric and reality - PAHO report on the mining community of Anwiam

AngloGold Ashanti
According to the AGA website: “AngloGold Ashanti Limited is a global gold producer with 21
operations on four continents, a substantial project pipeline and an extensive, worldwide
exploration program. The company is listed on the New York, Johannesburg, Ghanaian, London
and Australian stock exchanges, as well as the Paris and Brussels bourses.” ii

Mining statue near the entrance to the AngloGold Ashanti mine in Obuasi / Franck Martin (24/03/10)

“AngloGold Ashanti is committed to continuously improving the performance of current assets through
cost management and increased labor productivity, as well as by seeking out value-adding growth
opportunities through exploration and a disciplined acquisition strategy. The company is focused on
generating competitive financial returns and on rewarding shareholders with semi-annual dividends after
providing for future growth.”iii

AGA professes that ethics are central to their business model and claims that all of its business
interests and practices fully comply with state and international law. The findings of PAHO are
directly at odds with the claims made by AGA in the Ethics section of www.anglogold.co.za.

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Rhetoric and reality - PAHO report on the mining community of Anwiam

Examples of AGA’s cooperate responsibly policies


o We comply with all laws, regulations, standards and international conventions which apply
to our businesses and to our relationships with our stakeholders. Specifically, AngloGold
Ashanti supports the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Fundamental Rights
Conventions of the International Labour Organization (ILO) and those principles and values
referred to in the United Nations Global Compact. iv

o Should laws and regulations be non-existent or inadequate, we will maintain the highest
reasonable regional standard for that location. v

o We are committed to seeking out mutually beneficial, ethical long-term relations with those
with whom we do business. vi

o If an employee acts in contravention of these principles, the company will take the
appropriate disciplinary action concerning such contravention. This action may, in cases of
severe breaches, include termination of employment. In addition, certain contraventions may
also result in the commencement of civil proceedings against the employee and the referral
of the matter to the appropriate enforcement bodies if criminal proceedings appear
warranted. vii

o We will promote the application of our principles by those with whom we do business. Their
willingness to accept these principles will be an important factor in our decision to enter into
and remain in such relationships viii

The AGA mine dominates the Obuasi skyline/Franck Martin (24/03/10)

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Examples of AngloGold Ashanti cooperate values

Safety is our first value.


We place people first and correspondingly put the highest priority on safe and
healthy practices and systems of work. We are responsible for seeking out new
and innovative ways to ensure that our workplaces are free of occupational injury
and illness. We live each day for each other and use our collective commitment,
talents, resources and systems to deliver on our most important commitment ... to
care. ix

We treat each other with dignity and respect.


We believe that individuals who are treated with respect and who are entrusted to
take responsibility respond by giving their best. We seek to preserve people's
dignity, their sense of self-worth in all our interactions, respecting them for who
they are and valuing the unique contribution that they can make to our business
success. We are honest with ourselves and others, and we deal ethically with all of
our business and social partners. x

We are accountable for our actions and undertake to deliver on our


commitments.
We are focused on delivering results and we do what we say we will do. We
accept responsibility and hold ourselves accountable for our work, our behaviour,
our ethics and our actions. We aim to deliver high performance outcomes and
undertake to deliver on our commitments to our colleagues, business and social
partners, and our investors. xi

The communities and societies in which we operate will be better off for
AngloGold Ashanti having been there.
We uphold and promote fundamental human rights where we do business. We
contribute to building productive, respectful and mutually beneficial partnerships
in the communities in which we operate. We aim to leave host communities with a
sustainable future. xii

We respect the environment.


We are committed to continually improving our processes in order to prevent
pollution, minimise waste, increase our carbon efficiency and make efficient use
of natural resources. We will develop innovative solutions to mitigate
environmental and climate risks. xiii

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NGO Concerns about AngloGold Ashanti Operations

Despite having a detailed corporate responsibility model, the actions of AGA are a concern for a number
of human rights organizations. Gold rush: The Impact of Gold Mining on Poor People in Obuasi, Ghana,
a 2005 report by ActionAid, outlines how mining activities have profound economic, social and
environmental consequences for the poor of Obuasi. Within this context, a number of serious human
rights accusations have been made against AGA.

ActionAid investigations also highlight how rivers and streams have been polluted with arsenic, iron,
manganese and heavy metals from past gold mining activities by AGA and its predecessor, Ashanti
Goldfields Corporation (AGC). Water sources that were previously used by thousands of local residences
for drinking water, fishing and irrigation are now unusable.xiv

Local residents claim that new cases of serious water pollution and flooding are still occurring and that
alternative sources of water provided by AGA, such as public standpipes, are dangerously contaminated,
broken or obsolete. Large areas of land in Obuasi, previously used for cultivation, are believed to have
been contaminated through toxic water pollution. Many subsistence farmers say their livelihoods have
been destroyed.

A 2005 report by Human Rights Watch, The Curse of Gold: Democratic Republic of Congo, also accused
AGA of committing serious human rights violations in the areas surrounding their mining activities in the
Congo. The report claimed AGA failed in its operations in Mongbwalu to uphold its own business
principles, as detailed in this report. “The company did not abide by its own internal standards on
promoting its business principles to those with whom it does business when deciding whether to enter
into a relationship with the Nationalist and Integrationist Front (FNI) armed group.”

Following the publication of their report, Human Rights Watch was unable to identify any appropriate
steps taken by the company to ensure human rights were respected in Mongbwalu. As a multinational
company with considerable influence, Human Rights Watch believes that AGA should have exercised its
leverage to pursue local actors to respect human rights and should have conditioned its gold exploration
activities on such commitments.xv

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Rhetoric and reality - PAHO report on the mining community of Anwiam

Summary of the current situation in Anwiam

During an interview on March 24, Kojo Appiah, Village Spokesman, summarised the problems
faced by the community of Anwiam:

“Our problems are many and started in 1989 when AGA started its
surface and underground mining. When they started blasting we
told them that our weak houses could not withstand the shocks.
Running water from the mine started to flood our communities, our
livestock drank from the contaminated water from the mine and as
you can see most of the buildings have collapsed and our livestock is
unhealthy.

We also have no access road to the surrounding towns. We are


trapped between the mines and the homes that the miners live in.
AGA has forbidden us from walking through the miners’ town and
so we have no way of getting out of our own village. There are
similar communities where they have active mining but in every one
of these communities they have an access road. We are the only
villagers that are unable to get out of their own village....We only
want the freedom to go to town to buy goods and care for our sick.

We have been meeting with the men from the company for all this
time, to no avail. We complain that life here is very hellish because
we do not have any electricity or an access road. Our wives and
mothers give birth on their way to the hospital and you can
understand the inherent danger with this. We have been
complaining and we have gotten to a point where we want the
mining company to resettle us...

...our homes are so weak that the house can collapse at any moment,
without warning. This is because, some years ago, the company
blasted into the mountain to access the gold... [When] we sleep, we
do not know if our houses will be standing the next day. Even the
pens for our animals are stronger than our homes. All we want is
for the company to resettle us.”

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Rhetoric and reality - PAHO report on the mining community of Anwiam

Projects Abroad Human Rights Office (PAHO) met with representatives from Anwiam on March 24th,
2010. During this visit it learned that the village is located on the outskirts of Obuasi and has a population
of 300. Its resident‟s claim that the village has existed for over 50 years and prior to the commencement
of AGA operations in the Anwiam area, the village economy was exclusively agricultural. Residents
stressed that this allowed the community to live as subsistence farmers, selling surplus yield to provide
money for education, village development and basic amenities. They allege that the activities of AGA
have destroyed the fertility of their farmland. Beyond the damage to the local economy, the researchers
observed that the living conditions were such that they have a legitimate claim for resettlement.

The Minerals and Mining Act, Section 73.4, states:

“The Minister shall ensure that inhabitants who prefer to be compensated by way of
resettlement as a result of being displaced by a proposed mineral operation are settled
on suitable alternate land, with due regard to their economic well-being and social and
cultural value.”xvi

Representatives from PAHO met with Nana Kwabena Boafo, the Village Chief, and Kojo Appiah, the
Village Spokesman, on the afternoon of March 24, 2010. He informed researchers of the unbearable
living conditions in Anwiam and attributed these problems to AGA‟s mining activities. During the
meetings, they accused AGA and its staff of violating many of their basic human rights. They also
explained that despite meeting with AGA representatives to discuss these issues, the company response
had been completely unacceptable. Despite the substandard living conditions, lack of adequate road
access and occurrences of health problems attributable to mining activity, research by PAHO has found
that the issue of resettlement has not be adequately addressed and requires immediate attention.

When PAHO returned May 27, 2010, it discovered that the situation had deteriorated. With the onset of
the annual rainy season the property had been damaged during heavy storms, making the need for the
immediate relocation of the village even more pressing. Kwabena Boafo explained that the village had not
been visited by any organisations, despite PAHO directly alerting Mr. John Owusu, General Manager of
Public Affairs for AngloGold Ahsanti to the situation on, April 12, 2010, and again on May 7. On May
10, 2010, PAHO also informed Mr. James Adjei, representative for the Minerals Commission, of the
human rights violations taking place in Anwiam. As of the date of this publication (02/06/10), neither
party has contacted PAHO regarding this issue.

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Rhetoric and reality - PAHO report on the mining community of Anwiam

Four Areas of Major Concern

Following these meetings, PAHO researchers identified four major areas of concern:

1. Access

2. Property damage

3. Flooding and water pollution

4. Health care

A family from Anwiam stands outside its home. The family explained that the damage to their home can be attributed to AGA mining activity. In the background a second severely
damaged home can be seen/ Franck Martin (24/03/10)

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Access
o AGA forbids the local residents from using the road running through the adjacent mining town.
Its employees claim that members of the community have stolen from them in the past – this
seems unlikely due to the high levels of security in each of the employee homes, including
window and door protection and security dogs.

o The local residents have no access roads to the surrounding towns and can only access their
homes by using an abandoned railway track covered with overgrown vegetation.

o AGA refuses to allow commercial vehicles on roads that run past their employees‟ homes. While
they have informed the local residents that they can use their own car on the road this is an
empty gesture as the community is so impoverished that owning a car is impossible.

o The community has alleged that during a number of medical emergencies, including births,
AGA security staff refused to allow commercial cars access to the village. The village
spokesman informed PAHO that members of the community have died because of their inability
to access hospitals in a reasonable time.

o The local residents must send their children to live with family in neighbouring villages if they
are to attend school.

A resident of Anwiam uses the only access route available to the community/Franck Martin (24/03/10)

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Rhetoric and reality - PAHO report on the mining community of Anwiam

Property Damage
The Minerals and Mining Act, Section 94, states: “Where a license is granted in a
designated area to a person other than the owner of the land, the licensee shall pay
compensation for the use of the land and destruction of crops to the owner of the land that
the Minister in consultation with the Commission and the Government agency with
responsibility for valuation of public lands may prescribe.”xvii

o The property of the local residents has been badly damaged by blasting - the detonation of
explosives - in the mines to access deep gold deposits and much of it is no longer
structurally sound. As a result, collapsing homes are common and the people are forced
to live in dangerous, potentially fatal conditions. In many cases the homes were in a
critical state of disrepair and looked like they were close to collapsing.

o These homes offer little protection from the large numbers of mosquitoes and fail to offer
the local residents adequate protection from the elements, particularly during the rainy
season.

o The community has no access to basic amenities such as electricity.

The remains of a house destroyed by AGA mining activity/Franck Martin (24/03/10)

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Flooding and Water Pollution


Section 17: “Subject to obtaining the requisite approvals or licenses under the Water
Resources Commission Act 1996 (Act 552), a holder of a mineral right may, for purposes of
or ancillary to the mineral operations, obtain, divert, impound, convey and use water from
a river, stream, underground reservoir or watercourse within the land the subject of the
mineral right.”xviii

o Mining activities have polluted the local water supply. In heavy storms, the chemicals
and dirt from the abandoned mine flow directly into the village. This contaminates
drinking water (including the water to be consumed by livestock) drinking water and
further damages property.

A stream where the community used to get their drinking water before AGA began mining operations/PAHO (24/03/10)

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o Flood defences erected by the mining company are frequently breached during heavy
storms.

The flood defences erected to stop polluted water running out of the AGA mines.
Local resident’s claim that the defences regularly breached/ Franck Martin (24/03/10)

o The quality of drinking water is so poor that local residents continue to suffer from a range
of preventable diseases.

Example of the quality of water available to the local residents/ Ryan Slade (27/05/10) Since the above water pump broke local residence have relied on one working pump to
serve the needs of 280 people living in the village/Franck Martin (24/03/10)

o The activities of AGA have rendered the village‟s primary water source undrinkable.
Following a number of meetings with the community representatives, AGA agreed to
install two water pumps. One of the pumps was damaged in a storm, yet the company
refused to repair it. This has left the 280 local residents with one working pump, which
provides the community with dirty water.

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Health Care

o AGA employees forbid the villagers from using commercial vehicles when passing through
the miner‟s town, which is the only road that comes near to their village. As such, during
medical emergencies the villagers have no vehicle access. The local residents claim this has
resulted in preventable deaths and a number of births taking place in unsafe conditions.

Comfort Amo, 31, with her eldest son, Emmanuel Dardo, 8, and youngest son, James Dardo, 11 months/Franck Martin

Comfort Amo, 31, is a native of Anwiam who has had her life transformed due to gold mining in
the greater Obuasi area. Her eldest son, Emmanuel Dardo, 8, was playing near the Covet (the
cement structure below) when he slipped and fell into the water, which is a breeding ground for
mosquitoes and his body was badly bitten. Mrs Amo informed PAHO that her youngest son,
James Dardo, 11 months (pictured below) was born on the railway line that links the village to
the outside world. His mother was unable to access suitable transport due to AGAs refusal to
allow commercial vehicles to pass through their company checkpoints. James‟ mother attributes
the rash on his skin to the circumstances of his birth.

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Transcript of Meeting with Village Representatives

Nana Kwabena Boafo: Village Chief


Kojo Appiah: Village Spokesman
Franck Martin: PAHO Volunteer
Maja Skjoldevald: PAHO Volunteer
David Martyn: PAHO Volunteer

*The following interview was recorded 24/03/10. A representative from Wacam acted as a translator
between PAHO and the local residents. Below is a copy of the interview, as recorded by Franck Martin.

Kojo Appiah: Our problems are many and started in 1989 when AngloGold Ashanti started its surface
and underground mining. When they started blasting we told them that our weak houses could not
withstand the shocks. Running water from under the ground started to flood our communities. Our
livestock drank from the contaminated water from the mine and as you can see most of the buildings have
collapsed and our livestock is unhealthy.

We also have no access road to the surrounding towns. We are trapped between the mines and the homes
that the miners live in. AGA has forbidden us from walking through the miners‟ town and so we have no
way of getting out of our own village. There are similar communities where they have active mining but
in every one of these communities they have an access road. We are the only villagers that are unable to
get out of our own village. They say that we are not allowed to bring a car through because we are going
to use it to steal from them and we find that unacceptable because every car must pass through a big
security checkpoint. Each car and person is thoroughly searched. If you assume we would steal from them
when we get to the checkpoint, they will quickly find it. We only want the freedom to go to town to buy
goods and care for our sick.

We have been meeting with the men from the company for all this time, but to no avail. We complain that
life here is very hellish because we do not have any electricity or an access road. Our wives and mothers
give birth on their way to the hospital and you can understand the inherent danger with this. We have
been complaining and we have gotten to a point where we want the mining company to resettle us. As I
said life here is very hellish and we cannot live a meaningful life in these conditions so we want to be
resettled. This is the stage we are at in this long struggle.

The reason I say life is hellish is because of the blasting. At the moment our homes are so weak that the
houses can collapse at any moment, without warning. This is because, some years ago, the company

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blasted into the mountain to access the gold and. We are especially afraid during the rainy season. When
we sleep, we do not know if our homes will be standing the next day. Even the pens for our animals are
stronger than our homes. All we want is for the company to resettle us.

In August, there was a violent rain storm and the whole village was flooded with contaminated water
from the mine. There was nowhere to step without being in the dirty water.1 We went to the mining
company and told them what had happened and their response was very disheartening. I told them that I
believe that if I have property and it is destroyed, the best way forward is to find a solution rather than
being treated with disdain. When we complain, they adopt a casual attitude and ignore our pleas. The
company does not treat us like we are human beings. They show their animals more respect.

Throughout the course of our engagements with the mining company, they have told us that they cannot
resettle us, but they will give us money. They said they would come and survey the damage to our homes
and help us to mend the cracks but when it rains the village floods. Occasionally, we also experience
some blasts from the surrounding mines that are still active. So if they are not going to resettle us and
continue to blast, then when it rains we are going to be flooded with filthy water. The company said that
they will give us cement. What good is it if the house is filled with contaminated water? In March of last
year they said they would supply us with cement to help us rebuild our homes. Even though this is not
what we asked for, it would still help us to prevent our homes from falling down. It is now March 2010
and we are still waiting.

I also remember a case, many years ago when the mine was blasting and the shockwaves knocked a little
boy over, he hit his head and fell into a coma. He survived but we do not yet know if the damage will be
long-term. Even the pictures we hang on our walls fall down and shatter.

Maja Skjoldevald: What arguments do they have for not resettling the community?

Nana Boafo: According to the mining company, they do not have the money to resettle the community.
This is why they want to provide us with cement. They also told us that if we had told them earlier, when
the mining operation was at its peak, they could have resettled us. Their operation in the mine behind us is
currently inactive and the company says that our resettlement is impossible.

A few years ago, we staged a demonstration demanding to be resettled. We explained that their operations
had left our village uninhabitable. They told us that they would resettle us with a neighbouring
community and we decided that we would end our campaign. Some months later, we discovered that the

1
Kojo Appiah points to the large crack in the land that carried the water from the mine to the village.

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community had been moved without us. When we demanded an explanation, they told us our leaders had
told them we wanted to stay. I am the Village Chief and I know that no one from my village said this.
Why would they? Our homes are falling down, our children, wives and mothers are sick and we have
nothing. It is clear that they are lying to us. When we protested about this they brought an armoured
vehicle and fired in the direction of the crowd. Had it not been for one miner who helped to calm the
situation, many people might have died. The arguments by the mining company are unacceptable and
they use lies and deceit to trick us. We are not exposed to the technicalities of the issue, so we are
vulnerable and the company knows this.

David Martyn: Have the police ever come to the town with security from AGA?

Kojo Appiah: They used to come often I remember, that, on one occasion, they came unannounced in the
night, about 3am, and they claimed that some of their property had gone missing. They told us that they
were going to search every house in the community. I remember that my mother‟s money went missing
during the search.

Franck Martin: Was that the police or the mining security?

Kojo Appiah: It is the police, the mining security and sometimes the military. It is a combined operation.

David Martyn: Have there been any cases of brutality against community members?

Kojo Appiah: Many of our farms are close to their operation and when we go to work our land we are
frequently arrested for trespassing. I remember on one occasion that a villager went to his farm and he
saw some wood on his land. He brought it home to use it to repair some of the blasting damage to his
house. When the security staff heard about this they beat him and then arrested him. He spent 6 months in
prison.

Franck Martin: Does that man still live here?

Kojo Appiah: No, the man is now dead.

Last week, an elderly man in our village was very sick. We went to get a car from Obuasi. When we
arrived at the security checkpoint, we told them that we needed to use the car to bring him to hospital.
They immediately told us that this was impossible and that we should turn back. The man is called
Boamah and he is 60 years old. He is still very sick and we have been unable to bring him to the hospital.
They have said that if we have a car, then we can drive ourselves. But look at our village, there is no way
that any of us can afford something like that!

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Franck Martin: What was wrong with him?

Kojo Appiah: He was suffering from severe malaria. I can also think of three occasions when we have
been unable to take the patients to hospital and they died. Abena Manu, 76, died in the village in 2006;
Ekua Owusuwae, 51, died in 2004; Papa Abdullah, 65, died in 2003. All of these people died of
preventable illness. On each occasion, we asked the company to let us use a car from town to come to the
community to collect them, and on each occasion they refused, claiming that this would be a security risk.

Franck Martin: To confirm, were their deaths preventable if they had been given medical assistance and
did the community explain that there was a medical emergency?

Kojo Appiah: Yes and yes. They died of illnesses that have not killed anyone in our village for many
years. When we asked them for help, they simply said that we were not allowed through their workers‟
town. They said we were only allowed to use our own car, no commercial cars allowed.

Franck Martin: Do the mine workers use taxies?

Kojo Appiah: Yes, they use them all the time. It would not have been difficult for them to call one for us.
Without our own access road, we have no way of getting out of the town, except by walking down the
abandoned railway.

Franck Martin: There is obviously no ambulance service so if AGA staff prevent commercial vehicles
from using the road then, the villagers must walk to the hospital?

Kojo Appiah: Yes.

David Martyn: Which hospital are the villagers allowed to use? Can they use the AGA hospital in
Obuasi?

Kojo Appiah: If it is an emergency case, they will not allow you to use their facilities. They tell us to use
the government hospital. We are not allowed to use the AGA hospital, though it is the closest. There are
many examples of the villagers being prevented from going to the hospital. That woman sitting there on
the bench gave birth to her son on the railway track in April 2009. 2 We believe that if they allow us
access to the town then these dangers will be limited. When a woman gives birth there are so many
dangers and complications yet, AGA are forcing our women to give birth on dusty railways tracks in the
middle of the night.

2
Kojo Appiah points to Comfort Amo, 31, and her son James Dardo, 11months. James’s skin is covered with an unusual rash
and an array of different coloured/sized blisters.

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Rhetoric and reality - PAHO report on the mining community of Anwiam

Franck Martin: Have there been any cases where serious complications have arisen?

Kojo Appiah: Yes, sometimes there are very serious complications.

David Martyn: Does the community have access to clean drinking water?

Kojo Appiah: We used to have a hand operated bore hole, we dug it ourselves. It is called an „Atta Na‟.
We lost it to surface mining and AGA gave us a new pump, but when they ended their operations in the
mine behind us, they moved it to the other side of our village. 380 people live here and one pump is not
enough. We explained this to them and they told us that fixing the second pipe was impossible. For years
our pleas for an alternative source of drinking water have fallen on deaf ears. The water that we have to
drink is very dirty. Since we have had to drink it, we have had many cases of unexplainable sickness. But
we have no other option.3

Since the mining company arrived we have seen a rise in the number of malaria cases in the village. Last
year, in December, Twabena Obnobeng, 54, died of TB. We do not know when we are going to die. We
have come to realise that the sicknesses that come from the mine take years to appear. When the mine
started these diseases became a part of us.

Akua Afriyie:4I am very sick, but I do not know what it is from. I have lived here my whole life, and
before the mine, the villagers did not get unexplained illnesses. Since AGA started to work here, I have
watched the villagers suffer from unknown sickness.

Kojo Appiah: About a week ago, a vast cloud of smoke engulfed the whole community and for hours the
smoke would not settle for hours. We believe that it was from the mine. Nothing else in the area could
generate such a magnitude of smoke.

The water problem is also very important because the filthy water allows the mosquitoes to breed and
then people get sick. There is a large covet that floods in the rains. 5 Last week, a little boy fell into the
covet.6 We went to the mine and asked them to cover this over because we have many children in the
village and we cannot watch them every minute of the day. They refused.

We blame the covet for the large numbers of malaria infections. AGA says that they help the communities
to deal with this problem but when the men come to spray, they only spray inside our homes. They refuse

3
Nana asks one of the children to bring a bucket of water for us to see. The water is filthy, with a dirty layer of brown sediment
settled at the bottom.
4
Akua Afriyie is the mother of Nana Kwabena Boafo, the village chief.
5
A covet can be loosely described as a partially walled up weir-like filtration structure. Since it was destroyed by mining activity
it has become a breeding ground for mosquitoes and is filled with putrid water and mosquito larva.
6
Emmanuel lifts his top to reveal 50-100 mosquito bites on his chest and stomach.

22
Rhetoric and reality - PAHO report on the mining community of Anwiam

to spray outside of our homes or on the roves of our homes. We know that the mosquitoes come from
outside, so spraying inside will do little to stop them from breeding or getting into our homes. What is the
point in spraying only inside and not outside? We tried to get them to spray the covet but we were told
they would only spray inside. We explained that this was a major breeding ground but they would not
listen to us.

There are many young men in the village and we asked the mine to employ some of them, given the
damage they have done to our town. When we hear that they are employing our men go but only one man
out of roughly a hundred in the village is employed in the mine.

David Martyn: Are any of the royalties ever given to the village?

Kojo Appiah: What are royalties?

Nana Boafo: I know what they are but I have never seen any.

Franck Martin: How many times has the community complained to AGA?

Kojo Appiah: It is very hard to give an exact number, but over the last 6 years we have met with a
representative from the company at least 6 times each year, so between 30 and 40 times.

Franck Martin: What happens at the meetings? What do the staff say when you inform them about your
hardships?

Kojo Appiah: They tell us: “We have heard what you have said, we have heard what you have said.” That
is all they say.

Franck: What are the names of some of the people that they meet with?

Kojo Appiah: Elton Annan and Joseph Quicoe of the company‟s Sustainable Development Department
and Mr. Aboagye, the manager of the Obuasi mining area. Six years have passed and nothing has changed
so they are not listening to us.

Franck Martin: In the last six years, with all of these complaints, what actually has been done by AGA
to help the town of Anwiam?

Kojo Appiah: They have given us one water pipe, placed ineffective boulders near the mine to stop the
dirty water from running into our town and they occasionally spray the inside of our homes with mosquito
repellent.

23
Rhetoric and reality - PAHO report on the mining community of Anwiam

Franck Martin: Anything else?

Kojo Appiah: No. But the water pollution is their fault. Giving us a tap is not helping us because they are
the source of the problem.

Kojo Appiah: The towns of Sansu, Anyinam and Odumase have been given free electricity and AGA has
even constructed a home for the chief. Our population is three times bigger than theirs. Why will they not
do the same for us?

The community did not come to meet the mine. The mine came to our community, so all of these issues
should have been addressed rather than treating us like this.

Franck Martin: Where have you asked to be resettled to?

Kojo Appiah: The company should relocate us. How are we to find a new town when we are unable to get
out of our own? If they find a place for us they can show us and we will make a decision, but as of yet
they have done nothing.

Property damage in Anwiam/ Ryan Slade (27/06/10) Example of the housing conditions of the AGA staff living approximately 30 meters
from Anwiam (27/06/10)

24
Rhetoric and reality - PAHO report on the mining community of Anwiam

Recommendations

Following lengthy discussions with the community representatives


from Anwiam, PAHO call for:
The immediate resettlement of the community of Anwiam to a new village site that is
suitable for practicing sustainable farming activity, has clean sources of water, direct
access to a public road and is located outside of mine blasting zones.

AngloGold Ashanti should immediately:


Identify an appropriate relocation site for the residents of Anwiam.

Agree to a relocation timescale that is acceptable to the residents of Anwiam.

Launch an investigation through the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative


Justice into human rights allegations. xix

Cooperate with independent investigations into human rights allegations.xx

Attend a public stakeholder meeting with the local residents of Anwiam to discuss the
aforementioned issues in a frank and transparent manner.

The Ghanaian government should:

Supervise the resettlement of Anwiam, working in conjunction with the community and
appropriate AGA employees.

Enforce a more stringent water monitoring and pollution regime through the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). xxi

Launch an inquiry into the activities of AGA in the Obuasi area. xxii

Revise Ghanaian Mining Law to ensure it protects the human rights of all Ghanaian
citizens.

Enact more stringent legislation to ensure mining companies abide by Ghanaian Mining
Law.

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Rhetoric and reality - PAHO report on the mining community of Anwiam

References
i
Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice, Ghana, The State of Human Rights in Mining
Communities in Ghana, 2008, p58-59.

ii
Anglogold Ashanti official website, Homepage, 2010, 31/03/10, http://www.anglogold.co.za/Default.htm
iii
Ibid
iv
Anglogold Ashanti official website, Ethics, 2010, 31/03/10, http://www.anglogold.co.za/Values/Ethics.htm
v
Ibid
vi
Ibid
vii
Ibid
viii
Ibid
ix
Anglogold Ashanti official website, Values, 2010, 31/03/10, http://www.anglogold.co.za/Values/Values.htm
x
Ibid
xi
Ibid
xii
Ibid
xiii
Ibid
xiv
ActionAid, Gold rush, The impact of gold mining on poor people in Obuasi in Ghana, 2005, p3,
http://www.actionaid.org.uk/doc_lib/gold_rush.pdf
xv
Human Rights Watch, The Curse of Gold: Democratic Republic of Congo, 2005, P80,
http://www.anglogold.com/NR/rdonlyres/CBB6C75C-EE9C-439E-962F-DDB5C52FB968/0/HRWDRCreport.pdf
xvi
Ibid
xvii
Minerals and Mining Act 2006, 73.4, p43
xviii
Minerals and Mining Act 2006, 73.4, p12
xix
ActionAid, Gold rush, The impact of gold mining on poor people in Obuasi in Ghana, 2005, p31,
http://www.actionaid.org.uk/doc_lib/gold_rush.pdf
xx
Ibid
xxi
Ibid
xxii
Ibid

26

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