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© 2024 | The Fourth Estate
General News

Ada chiefs, former PIAC Chairman file lawsuits to stop Electrochem salt project

By Seth J. Bokpe Philip Teye Agbove Date: February 6, 2024
Former PIAC Chairman, Noble Wadza (left) and Nene Amartey Korley, Chief of Aminapah (right) have gone to court to stop the Electrochem Project owned by businessman, Daniel McKorley (middle)
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A private citizen and four chiefs of Ada have filed two separate lawsuits seeking an injunction to stop Electrochem Ghana Limited from mining salt at Ada in the Greater Accra Region.

Noble Wadzah, a former Chairman of the Public Interest and Accountability Committee (PIAC) and Nene Amartey Korley, Chief of Aminapah and three other chiefs, also want the High Court to, among other reliefs, declare the lease granted Electrochem illegal.

Joined to the legal action are the Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources, State Interest and Governance Authority (SIGA), Minerals Commission and the Ada East District Assembly.

The plaintiffs’ case is anchored on the grounds that the Electrochem deal was in gross violation of PNDC Law 287 and the Master Plan for the development of the salt industry in the Ada area. They are also claiming that the lease is an affront to the rights of indigenes who have lived within the Songhor Salt enclave for centuries.

They also accused Electrochem of violating some terms of the lease agreement.

PIAC former Chairman’s case

In his suit filed before an Accra High Court, Mr Wadzah said the legal action was prompted by a letter from the district assembly directing salt miners on the Ada Songhor Lagoon site to vacate by December 31, 2023.

He wants a judicial review of the lease agreement and a declaration by the court that the Electrochem lease is illegal, particularly when the company’s obligations in the lease do not conform with PNDCL 287 and the Master Plan.

Mr Wadzah argues that Electrochem was required by the lease agreement to pay GHS2.3 million, which is 10% of the offer price of the lease as a deposit by August 31, 2021.

Court documents show that it was not until September 7, 2021, that Mr Daniel McKorley, Executive Chairman of the McDan Group wrote to the branch manager of ADB Head Office, to request the transfer of the said amount to SIGA to make the deposit on behalf of Electrochem, which is a subsidiary of the McDan Group.

Mr Wadzah also argues in his lawsuit, failure to make the deposit by the agreed date meant that Electrochem was in breach of the lease agreement.

Further, Mr Wadzah stated that President Nana Akufo-Addo, who holds the Songhor Lagoon salt deposits in trust for the owners, must ensure that the salt is mined, and the salt industry developed in compliance with PNDC Law 287.

President Nana Akufo-Addo was at the commissioning of the Electrochem Project in August last year

He said a cursory look at Electrochem’s business plan showed that it had no plans to operate with the master plan for the area but rather to completely marginalise and eliminate small-scale mining at the lagoon site.

“The Interested Party’s [Electrochem] acts of impunity have been fueled by the failure of the second and third respondents [Minerals Commission and SIGA] to ensure that the lease granted to the Interested Party and the divestiture respectively were granted in accordance with the law,” he added.

Chiefs’ suit

The case of the four chiefs is that they and their community stand to suffer greater hardship and irreparable damage if the Minerals Commission, the Ada East Assembly and Electrochem are not restrained from their lands until the final determination of the case.

In their case filed before the Tema High Court on January 17, 2024, the chiefs claim that the government knew that the Terkpebiawe clan owned the Songhor Lagoon.

According to the chiefs, although they had responded to a notice published by the Minerals Commission, indicating that their lives could be affected by the lease, the government failed to consult the principal members of the Terkpebiawe Clan but went ahead to grant the lease to Electrochem on October 29, 2020.

Artisanal salt miners at Ada say they’ve mined the commodity in the Songhor lagoon for centuries but are being ejected because of Electrochem

Our villages fall within the concession area and the indigenes of the villages have put up properties in the said areas. The properties in these villages include houses, schools, churches and other structures put up by the indigenes for the commercial activities, they said.

The chiefs noted that although the Ada East District Assembly knew of the concession granted Electrochem, it kept issuing business permits to indigenes to win salt. The permits gave the indigenes the green-light to put up structures and buy machines to facilitate their salt-winning activities.

“The defendants are aware of the fact that Parliament is re-examining the agreement between the State and the third defendant [Electrochem] but the defendants continue to intimidate and oppress the indigenes with the sole purpose of getting them out of their land even though they have not put in place any plan of resettling them,” the plaintiffs said.

Citing an example of the harassment their communities were suffering, the chiefs said on December 14, 2023, the district assembly “ordered all persons occupying the lands within concession area to vacate the land for the third defendant [Electrochem].”

YOU MAY ALSO WANT TO READ: 

How a private company’s salt mining is undermining livelihoods, human rights, press freedom 

 

TAGGED:Ada-Songhor Salt projectAkufo-Addocp_general-newsDaniel MckorleyElectrochemNoble WadzahTerkpebiawe Clan
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  • Abraham Doetser Alimo says:
    February 6, 2024 at 11:04 am

    a good fight!

    Reply
    • Emmanuel Adjaottor says:
      February 6, 2024 at 7:16 pm

      We are all behind you keep the good fight God will help us one day

      Reply
    • Emmanuel Adjaottor says:
      February 6, 2024 at 7:18 pm

      We are all behind you

      Reply
  • Nene Kusietu says:
    February 6, 2024 at 3:50 pm

    better days ahead

    Reply
  • George Abayateye Kbrōwń says:
    February 6, 2024 at 5:01 pm

    Electrochem must stop ✋ ❌
    How can they be working on Ada land and still killing people of the Ada
    Because of their belongings

    Electrochem much stop ✋ ?
    Electrochem much stop ✋ ?
    Electrochem much stop ✋ ?

    Reply
  • Mansaalor says:
    February 9, 2024 at 12:39 pm

    It is very unfortunate. Pathetically unfortunate that the good people of Ada would continue to do this. There has NEVER been this level of development in the area until the coming of Electrochem. I believe the Ada people are reasonable enough to put themselves together and collaborate with Electrochem so as to enhance the development of the area. I’ll urge them, that rather than fighting the company, they should approach them on a cordial, friendly manner and work together for a better Ada. I know they can do it so get to work and achieve better results.

    Reply
  • Faisel Abdul-Iddrisu says:
    March 31, 2024 at 5:38 pm

    Belly-full leaders who have no iota of sensitivity.

    Reply

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