Saturday, April 18, 2026
NPA Website
HomeGeneralStop Pushing Political Interests Masked As National Interest - Steve Manteaw To...

Stop Pushing Political Interests Masked As National Interest – Steve Manteaw To Mireku Duker’s PA

Chairman of the Ghana Extractives Transparency Initiative, Dr. Steve Manteaw, has slammed the Personal Assistant to former deputy minister of Lands and Natural Resources for politicizing issues related to the Ghana Gold Board’s gold refinery agreement with Gold Coast Refinery and Rand Refinery.

The Personal Assistant, Wisdom Gomashie had raised questions on his Facebook page over why the Ghana Gold Board chose to sign a gold refinery agreement with Gold Coast Refinery, a private refinery with a 15 percent share, instead of Royal Ghana Refinery which he claims has a twenty percent Bank of Ghana stake.

The content of his post suggests political motives and personal gains could be the motivation for the GoldBod’s decision to engage Gold Coast Refinery.

” RGR, in which Ghana holds a 20% stake through Bank of Ghana, can process 400Kg of good daily, totalling about 2.8 tonnes weekly.

It is a valuable state asset aimed at value addition for our gold. Meanwhile, the private Gold Coast Refinery just processes one tonne per week. So why are we investing a 15% stake there ?, ” he wrote

However, in a Sharp rebuttal, Dr. Steve Manteaw wondered how a 20% BoG stake in Royal Refinery make it a government-controlled refinery.

He described that assertion as ‘rubbish’, questioning the interest behind Royal Gold Refinery.

“How can a 20% BoG stake in Royal Refinery make it government-controlled? How is that control exercised?
Some rubbish I’m reading this morning.
Forgive my intolerance, folks. It’s getting nauseating now, especially the talk of political and personal interests. Who doesn’t know the interests behind Royal Gold? Or maybe those are religious interests,” he quizzed

According to him, government is not under any obligation to use a particular vehicle to achieve its policy objectives.

For Steve Manteaw, Gomashie’s aim, in recent days, has been to push a political interests masked as national interest.

“Feel free to do your work, ask questions as you deem fit, but avoid conjecture and mischief. Take your time and learn. 20% stake in a venture can give one control, only under certain conditions, which are not applicable here. Again, one can shelve Royal Gold for reasons that may not be apparent to you. Political and personal interests of previous government in Royal Gold could be the reason for abandoning it. In any case, government is not under any obligation to use a particular vehicle to achieve its policy objectives,” he stated.

Meanwhile, the President of the Ghana Chamber of Mines, Ing. Dr. Ken Ashigbey has described the GoldBod–Gold Coast Refinery gold refining agreement as a critical milestone in Ghana’s journey toward achieving London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) accreditation and deepening local value addition in the gold sector.

Speaking at the signing ceremony, he congratulated the Chief Executive Officer and Board of the Ghana Gold Board, as well as the Bank of Ghana and its Board, for their roles in bringing the landmark agreement to fruition.

He noted that the agreement marks only the beginning of a longer process aimed at entrenching gold refining in Ghana, stressing that the Chamber’s commitment to local refining goes beyond rhetoric.

According to him, the Chamber has actively engaged Gold Coast Refinery, Rand Refinery, and Royal Refinery as part of a deliberate strategy to build the technical and institutional foundations required for LBMA accreditation.

The Ghana Gold Board (GoldBod) on Tuesday , January, 20 signed a landmark gold refining agreement with Gold Coast Refinery, marking a major step towards deepening value addition within Ghana’s gold sector.

The partnership seeks to reduce Ghana’s long-standing reliance on exporting raw gold, a practice that has historically led to significant revenue losses that could otherwise be captured through domestic refining and downstream processing.

Under the agreement, gold sourced from both artisanal and large-scale mining operations will be refined locally for trade and export, bolstering Ghana’s position along the global gold value chain.

RELATED ARTICLES

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisment -
NPA Website

Most Popular

Recent Comments