Just six days ago, the Divisional Chiefs of Bogoso-Prestea sent a petition to President John Dramani Mahama, calling for the government to intervene and place the Bogoso-Prestea Mine under “a financially capable investor”, pointedly questioning whether Heath Goldfields had the capacity to develop the asset.
This week, there are reports that the same three chiefs are preparing to send a letter to the President, lavishing praise on Heath Goldfields and commending the company’s “bold and timely investment.”
The reversal is so abrupt it raises an uncomfortable question: what changed in six days that transformed the chiefs’ assessment of a company they had just asked the President to review?
What the Chiefs said before
On March 18, Nana Adu Panyin II, Nana Nteboa Prah IV, and Nana Kwesi Sompreh II submitted a formal petition to Jubilee House expressing frustration with the pace of Heath Goldfields’ development work.
“However, more than a year after the grant of the mining leases, the level of progress expected in the redevelopment and revitalisation of the mine has not materialised as anticipated,” the petition stated. The chiefs noted they were “receiving concerns regarding the slow pace of development and the uncertainty surrounding the future of the mine.”
The letter then made an explicit appeal to the President: “We therefore humbly appeal to Your Excellency to kindly intervene and ensure that the Bogoso-Prestea Mine is placed under the management of a financially capable investor.”
The implication was unmistakable. The chiefs were telling the President that Heath Goldfields, the current licence holder, might not be the investor.
What they’re saying now
Reports of the March 24 letter tell a completely different story. It reportedly commends Heath Goldfields for its commitment to the revitalisation and sustainable development of the mine and praises the company’s planned investment of approximately US$135 million in the first year.
The chiefs now call the company’s Five-Year Socioeconomic Development Plan forward-looking and pledge to collaborate and work closely with the company and the government to ensure the successful design and implementation of this plan.
They reportedly conclude by recommending to the President that Heath Goldfields is given the support and assistance needed to operate the Bogoso-Prestea Mine profitably.
The $135 million question
The timing of the new letter raises a critical credibility issue: Heath Goldfields has held the mining licence since December 2024, more than three months before the chiefs’ March 18 petition.
If the company had $135 million in capital ready to deploy in its first year of operations, as the March 24 letter claims, where has that investment been for the past year?
The chiefs’ March 18 complaint was explicit: “More than a year after the grant of the mining leases, the level of progress expected in the redevelopment and revitalisation of the mine has not materialised as anticipated.”
Six days later, the same chiefs are commending Heath for planned investment they say will happen, not investment already underway. That’s a curious way to praise a company for finally delivering on promises it should have kept long ago.
The Question for the Chiefs
Traditional authorities occupy a unique position in Ghanaian governance. Chiefs are custodians of community interests, and leaders trusted to represent their people’s welfare, not personal or sectional interests.
The six-day reversal, without any public explanation, risks undermining that trust.
Did Heath Goldfields present information to the chiefs between March 18 and March 24 that fundamentally altered their assessment of the company’s financial and technical capacity?
More importantly, if the company truly possesses $135 million in investment capital, why hasn’t it deployed any meaningful amount of that capital in the year since it acquired the licence?
Or is something else at play, engagement that benefits the chiefs personally but not necessarily the communities they represent?
The people of Bogoso-Prestea deserve clarity on this.
The mine is a generational asset for their communities.
Employment, infrastructure, and local economic growth depend on who manages it and how seriously they take their commitments. They also depend on leadership that asks hard questions about promises, not soft questions that let companies off the hook.
A Test of Leadership
The chiefs’ letters reference “community participation,” “inclusive growth,” and the need to “prioritise our communities in these opportunities.” Those are the right words.
But leadership means doing what’s right for your people even when it’s politically or personally uncomfortable.
It means asking hard questions of powerful companies and sticking to them. It means being consistent.
On the available record, the Bogoso-Prestea chiefs have failed that test within six days.
The communities they lead now have to wonder: are these letters reflecting the chiefs’ genuine assessment of what’s best for Bogoso-Prestea? Or are they reflecting something else entirely?
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Source: www.myjoyonline.com
