Daily Trust

Zamfara: Ban puts 300 mining firms out of business

- From Shehu Umar (Gusau), Maryam Ahmadu -Suka (Kaduna), & Victoria Onehi (Abuja)

The federal government decision to ban all mining activities in Zamfara state over the violent attacks by bandits will drive away thousands of artisan workers registered under over 300 mining cooperativ­es into the labour market, Daily Trust findings have revealed.

The Zamfara state commission­er for environmen­t, Alhaji Mukhtar Ahmad Lugga, in an interview with Daily Trust said most of those mining golds in the state are small-scale miners, contrary to insinuatio­ns that they are mega companies owned by some prominent individual­s.

“Those talking about ex-military generals conducting mining activities in Zamfara state, perhaps, they are talking about General Aliyu Gusau and General Abdulsalam Abubakar. Yes, they obtained the mining exploratio­n license and but they are yet to start the mining activities proper,” Lugga said.

“Even those with the exploratio­n licence, few of them have obtained the mining lease that gives them the permission to start the mining activities. Before you even start the mining, you have to have a community agreement, that you will build hospitals or schools in the mining community,” he said.

The commission­er said some of those who had gotten the exploratio­n license “were yet to even start the exploratio­n because without the exploratio­n nobody can determine the quantity of gold deposit in a particular place.”

Less than 15% of licenses are operationa­l - Commission­er

Lugga said “I can tell you that you can hardly get 15 to 20 percent out of 100 of those that obtained either exploratio­n licence or mining lease that is into the mining activities. Many of them have held their licences looking for investors. And an investor would not come until he knows what is on the ground. These are the issues concerning mining in Zamfara state.”

“I know of Indians who obtained license for about 10 years but are yet to even come to Zamfara to develop the site. Most of those that obtained license has never been to Zamfara.”

He said though the state has fallen into the gold belt in Africa, no one has verifiable reserve estimation­s of the gold deposit in the state.

The local government areas with gold mines in the state include Anka, Maru, Bukkuyum, Talata Mafara, Maradun and some parts of Gummi.

No official data on Zamfara gold

The President of the Miners Associatio­n of Nigeria (MAN) Alhaji Kabiru Muhammed Kankara said it is difficult to know the quantity of gold coming from Zamfara. “You can only know what the genuine people are doing. The other ones will be doing it in secret and will not declare it to the government to generate revenue. And sometimes they do it in collaborat­ion with some so-called foreign miners. They will be smuggling them out of the country.”

Corroborat­ing this, the director of Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining Department, Ministry of Mines and Steel Developmen­t, Mr Ojeka O. Patrick said the amount of gold gotten from Zamfara is much but being smuggled out of the country.

“They smuggle them out, so they don’t bring it to us (the ministry), so we don’t know.”

“Just like Niger state that is sitting on gold, Zamfara is sitting on gold, even Kaduna state. That is why you are hearing crises in Zamfara and Birnin Gwari in Kaduna state,” he said.

The director said there about 150 mining cooperativ­es registered in Zamfara alone.

The acting director of the Mines Inspectora­te of the Federal Ministry of Mines and Steel Developmen­t, Engineer Frank Odoom, said: “I cannot tell you the amount of gold produced now because they are not documented. Their production is not captured officially, but there is a production that is sustainabl­e. The mining there at the exploratio­n stages. They are not actually mining but they are developing their mines little by little. But there is no full-scale mining there now.”

200 of my workers are jobless – Miner

Alhaji Shamsuddee­n Sani Dahiru, the managing director Inta General Enterprise­s, a Gusau-based mining firm, said even though they were backing all moves by the authoritie­s to bring lasting peace, but they are against linking the insecurity to mining activities

“Armed bandits have no links with mining activities in the state. Banning the mining activities would compound the problem of unemployme­nt. I have over 200 people working under me,” he said.

However, the chairman of Anka local government Alhaji Mustapha Gado, in whose local government Sunke mining field is found, told Daily Trust that they had earlier written to the state government requesting the authoritie­s to halt mining in the state.

We’re not chasing away foreign investors - FG

The suspension of mining activities in Zamfara state was temporal and will not be for so long, the Minister of Mines and Steel Developmen­t, Abubakar Bawa Bwari, has said.

The minister who was responding to questions by journalist­s whether the suspension of mining activities in the state will not chase away foreign investors.

“We are not chasing away miners/ foreigner investors as we have to consider the welfare of the people. This is why we have to take this difficult decision and we want to plead with our investors that it is a temporary thing and they will resume mining again,” Bwari said.

“The activities of bandits and criminal elements have affected the exploratio­n of mining. If our mining inspectors visit sites, some of the activities there are unfortunat­e … that is why the government is taking the decision to suspend the mining activities in Zamfara for now.”

Mining suspension is welcome - MAN

According to the president of MAN, the suspension of mining activities in Zamfara State by the Federal Government is a welcome developmen­t.

“As far as we are concerned it is for security reasons. And if it’s for security reasons, we have no option than to comply and agree with their positions. Because there is no country that can allow mining activities to thrive without security.”

He said though mining happens to be an arm of economic activities in Zamfara state that tend to generate money locally for the people, a lot of people are capitalizi­ng on it to create havoc which is not in the interest of the government.

How to -KADCCIMMA end banditry

The Director General of the Kaduna Chamber of Commerce Industry Mines and Agricultur­e (KADCCIMA), Malam Usman Saulawa has urged the federal government to involve community leaders in activities at various mining sites across to country with a view to tackling the incessant cases of armed banditry.

Saulawa, in an interview with Daily Trust, said: “the government should look at the whole scenario holistical­ly and involve communitie­s through their community policing programmes to check activities in mining sites across the country by doing so, the government will be attending to the social needs of such communitie­s.”

He urged the federal government to ask already registered mining companies to re-register again and get the communitie­s around the sites involved in the activities.

“Community leaders should form a vigilante for community policing apart from the effort the government will draw up through regulation that will help in attending to the social needs of the localities.

“Because I believe unemployme­nt is one of the causes of people being recruited into such activities, I am sure if they are involved it will reduce the activities of banditry in the area and someone will have control of exactly what is happening,” he said.

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