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Former Bogoso-Prestea Mine workers demand government intervention over unpaid dues

Kyei Addo Former workers of the Bogoso-Prestea Mine up in arms over arrears owed them

Sun, 2 Nov 2025 Source: www.ghanaweb.com

Former workers of the Bogoso–Prestea Mine have renewed calls for government intervention following what they describe as repeated failures by Heath Goldfields Ltd. (HGL) to honour its financial obligations to them.

Speaking at a news conference in Prestea on Thursday, October 30, 2025, the spokesperson for the workers, Kwame Kyei Addo, said the former employees have reached a breaking point after months of unfulfilled promises.

“Our patience has been stretched to its limit. The time for further promises has passed. Justice delayed is justice denied,” he said.

The mine’s previous owners, Future Global Resources (FGR), had their lease terminated in August 2024 following months of agitation by workers over unpaid salaries and benefits.

The lease was subsequently reassigned to HGL in November 2024 on the condition that it would clear all outstanding entitlements, stabilize operations, and revive the mine.



However, nearly a year later, Kyei Addo said HGL has failed to meet most of its obligations, leaving over 400 disengaged workers “in severe financial distress.”

“Despite clear legal mandates under Ghana’s Labour Act and repeated commitments made in official memos, HGL has defaulted on payments relating to provident fund arrears, end-of-service benefits, accrued leave, bonuses, and other statutory entitlements,” he added.

The workers also raised doubts about the circumstances surrounding the lease transfer, noting that HGL’s inability to honour its financial obligations “raises pressing questions about the adequacy of financial due diligence” before the reassignment.

The group acknowledged interventions by Lands Minister Emmanuel Armah-Kofi Buah, whose 120-day ultimatum in May 2025 led to limited payments to some former employees.

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“Without this intervention, not a single non-unionized affiliated worker would have received any compensation,” the statement noted.

But Kyei Addo emphasised that the company continues to “defy both moral and legal obligations” and called for immediate state intervention to compel HGL to settle all outstanding dues and audit its financial and operational capacity.

“We, the former workers of Bogoso–Prestea Mine, call on the Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources, the Minerals Commission, and all relevant state authorities to act decisively and without delay. The dignity, livelihoods, and rights of Ghanaian mine workers must not be sacrificed at the altar of empty assurances,” the statement concluded.

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Source: www.ghanaweb.com