Gold Fields: Damang youth push for local ownership and content

If there’s anything the youth of Damang have learned in 30 years of co-existing with a multinational miner, it’s this: foreign interests often come first
Despite promises of local job creation and skills development, most of the top roles at Goldfields were occupied by non-locals. Locals were relegated to casual labour—cleaning, catering, security—mostly through subcontractors. Even industrial attachments and national service placements often excluded Damang youth.
“This wasn’t a partnership. It was an extraction with exclusion,” said Eric Garibor. “Now that they are gone, let us chart a new course.”
The youth are advocating for the next concession to be awarded to a competent Ghanaian company—one that values community, promotes Ghanaian jobs, and reinvests in local infrastructure.
“A Ghanaian success story is possible. We’ve seen it at Awaso.
Let’s do the same in Damang,” Garibor said
Source: Classfmonline.com/Cecil Mensah
Trending Business
IACG targets 1,000 market traders and artisans in the Western and Western North Regions as part 2025 micro business clinics
10:28Basintale blocks renewal of Zoomlion's contract if salary remains GH¢250
13:14MDF forum pushes for mineral revenues to benefit mining communities
09:38MPs assure Zoomlion of gov't's prompt debt settlement
11:24GoldBod begins licensing of gold trading service providers
11:48President Mahama appoints Capt. James Richmond Quayson as the Director of Takoradi Port
13:10Replicate Kwahu Business Forum nationwide- UCC don to Mahama
09:27Better Ghana Alliance rebuts DPPF’s hailing of KGL as Africa’s top lotto company
09:13New policies will hurt mining sector growth - Minority to gov’t
08:27Ato Forson leads Ghana to participate in first IMF /World Bank Spring Meetings in Washington DC
02:50