President of TEAP, Kwadwo Yeboah (in yellow and brown fugu) interacts with media

The Extraction Accountability Project (TEAP), a Civil Society Organisation, is demanding the interdiction of Lands and Natural Resources Minister, Emmanuel Armah Kofi Buah and the dissolution of the National Anti-Illegal Mining Operations Secretariat (NAIMOS) over an alleged galamsey excavator scandal.

The group alleges that 41 excavators seized in Tarkwa were released under questionable circumstances with the authority of security personnel who claimed they acted under legitimate orders.

In an interaction with the media on August 22, 2025, TEAP, indicted that the development amounts to political interference, hence their demands.

They also point to documents which indicate that a company, AU Fields Ltd, had secured a formal mining support services agreement with Adamus Company Ltd to clear illegal miners, with National Security support.

“If these men are guilty, name them. But if they were obeying authority, then the real culprits are those who ordered the release,” President of TEAP, Kwadwo Yeboah remarked.

The pressure group believes the development is a well-coordinated scheme to protect politically connected galamsey operators.

Special anti-galamsey task force successfully reclaims excavators from Jimira Forest Reserve

It is now urging President Mahama to dissolve NAIMOS and launch a full-scale independent probe, warning that continued silence will erode public confidence in government’s commitment to fighting illegal mining.

The Group indicated that a report in its possession has accused Lands and Natural Resources Minister, Armah Kofi Buah, and his brother, Col Buah, of orchestrating a scheme to release the seized excavators to illegal miners, while branding the deployed officers as “rogue” to shield powerful interests.

They alleged that, the team deployed by the minister, which have released the seized excavators have allegedly collected a whopping $2 Million from the Chinese nationals for the release of each excavator, whilst Ghanaian nationals willing to retrieve their excavators were made to pay an amount of GHC100,000. 00.

Galamsey: 99 excavators retrieved, 208 suspects so far arrested – Police

Security insiders say the soldiers were detailed by the Presidency itself and performed their duties within lawful authority.

“How can four junior officers single-handedly control 41 heavy-duty excavators for months without higher-level backing? This narrative doesn’t add up,” he quizzed.

The scandal deepened after revelations that Col Buah backdated his appointment letter as head of the newly created National Anti-Illegal Mining Operations Secretariat (NAIMOS) to June 10, 2025, weeks before the task force was formally launched.

Critics say NAIMOS is fast becoming a political smokescreen, shielding connected galamsey financiers.

The Ministry of Defence reportedly considered transferring the excavators to the 2nd Infantry Battalion, but logistical constraints left the machines under the soldiers’ guard at Simpa Junction. Alleged attempts by Col Buah and associates to forcibly retrieve the equipment on July 17 and July 18 failed.

Meanwhile, evidence suggests a coordinated effort to smear anti-galamsey activists Abanga and Yamin, with a secret meeting between ministry officials and selected media figures on June 29, 2025.

Days later, media reports accused the activists of extortion, prompting the Attorney-General to direct EOCO to investigate them.

Observers now argue that the real scandal lies in political interference, not the conduct of the soldiers. Civil society voices are calling for an independent probe, stressing that “targeting the young officers while sparing the powerful is not justice but political theatre.”

VPO/EB

Meanwhile, watch the trailer to GhanaWeb’s upcoming documentary on teenage girls and how fish is stealing their futures below:



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