
A tragic mining accident at Manso Takorase in the Amansie South District of the Ashanti Region has claimed the lives of three persons after a pit collapsed on Thursday afternoon.
Eyewitnesses say the victims, believed to be local small-scale miners, were working deep inside the pit when its walls suddenly caved in, trapping them beneath heaps of sand and rocks.
Rescue efforts by residents and other miners proved unsuccessful, as all three were retrieved lifeless.
The bodies have since been deposited at the St. Martin’s Catholic Hospital morgue, while police and local authorities investigate the circumstances surrounding the collapse.
The incident has once again reignited public concern over the dangers associated with illegal small-scale mining, popularly known as galamsey.
Despite the government’s clampdown efforts, such activities remain widespread in the Amansie South enclave. Residents blame the frequent tragedies on weak safety measures and poor structural reinforcement of mining pits.
After visiting the scene, some opinion leaders at Manso Takorase appealed to the government and the Minerals Commission to intensify regulation of mining activities and to provide alternative livelihood opportunities for the youth to reduce the community’s dependence on unsafe mining ventures.
The Amansie South District is noted for extensive mining activities and has in recent years recorded several similar accidents, raising urgent calls for stronger enforcement of mining laws and education on safety practices.
On Tuesday, a devastating mining pit collapsed at Kasotie in the Atwima Mponua District of Ashanti Region, claiming the lives of seven people, with several others injured.
Source: Joseph Obeng