The Wound That Will Not Heal
Bernard Antwi Boasiako, known to Ghana as “Chairman Wontumi,” is the Ashanti Regional Chairman of the New Patriotic Party (NPP). He calls himself the “Governor of Kumasi.” He is also, according to the state, the owner of Akonta Mining Company Limited — a corporate entity that, between 2022 and 2025, allegedly conducted large‑scale illegal mining operations inside the Tano Nimiri Forest Reserve, a protected area in Ghana’s Western Region, without the required legal authorisation.
The company was told “no.” In August 2022, the Minerals Commission and the Forestry Commission refused Akonta Mining’s application to mine inside the reserve. The company mined anyway.
“The company, though holding a mining licence, was denied permission to operate within the reserve in August 2022, but allegedly went ahead with mining activities.” — Ghana News Agency, April 2026.
When investigators entered the forest, they found over 40 excavators, makeshift structures erected across the reserve, and an estimated 13 hectares of forest — an area roughly the size of 18 football pitches — completely destroyed. Sections of the Tano River, a critical source of drinking water for downstream communities, were polluted beyond recognition.
The wound is not just environmental. It is structural. While small‑scale artisanal miners (the everyday “galamsey” workers) are arrested, their excavators crushed and their pits filled, Chairman Wontumi — a man with direct ties to the highest levels of political power — has spent the last year in and out of courtrooms, deploying every legal manoeuvre the system offers, while the forest burns and the river runs brown.
How Impunity Becomes a Business Model
Akonta Mining is not a shadowy illegal operation. It is a registered company. It owns mining concessions elsewhere. Its shareholders and directors are known. Yet, on the state’s own account, the company illegally cut trees, built structures, and conducted mining operations inside a protected forest reserve without a valid permit, after its application had been explicitly refused.
This is not a breakdown of enforcement. It is a deliberate calculation of risk: when the probability of meaningful punishment approaches zero for politically connected actors, environmental destruction becomes a rational business decision.
In October 2025, Chairman Wontumi was arrested and charged in two separate illegal mining cases. The combined bail set by two High Courts was a staggering GH₵25 million — fifteen million for the Samreboi concession case and ten million for the Tano Nimiri forest case. The courts also placed him on a stop list and impounded his travel documents. For a working‑class Ghanaian, such a sum would be ruinous. For a political kingpin, it was a transaction cost — not a deterrent.
“Kingpins and financiers supply the capital, excavators, fuel, and mercury used in illegal mining. Politicians and local elites often protect these networks by using their influence to block enforcement.” — HELP Foundation Africa, November 2025.
Wontumi has pleaded not guilty to all charges. His legal team has argued that there is no evidence directly linking him to the mining activities inside the forest reserve. Yet the former General Manager of Akonta Mining, Edward Akuoko — once a co‑accused — has been turned into the prosecution’s star witness, and he has directly implicated his former boss. The prosecution is now parading five witnesses. The defence’s principal argument has not been factual; it has been procedural — seeking stay after stay, appeal after appeal, grinding the machinery of justice to a near halt.
Who Benefits When Justice Is Slow?
The TSA forensic question is direct: who benefits when the Wontumi trial drags on? The first beneficiary is Wontumi himself. Each adjournment pushes the day of reckoning further into the future. Each procedural appeal buys more time — time for political winds to shift, for witnesses to forget, for public outrage to subside.
The second beneficiary is the political structure that enables such behaviour. Political and legal analyst Kwame Owusu Danso noted that illegal mining in Ghana has become a “symptom of weak political will and elite protectionism,” where enforcement is directed at vulnerable local miners while powerful individuals “face few consequences.” The Wontumi case is not exceptional; it is emblematic. It reveals the architecture of selective accountability that has turned Ghana’s anti‑galamsey campaigns into exercises in theatre.
The third beneficiary is the entire transnational network that profits from illegal gold. According to the prosecution, dozens of pump‑action guns and hundreds of cartridges were recovered from Akonta Mining’s concession, alongside heavy machinery — evidence of an operation far beyond the scale of subsistence galamsey. The gold extracted from protected forests finds its way into international supply chains. The people who benefit never appear in court at all.
Wontumi’s legal team has also challenged the trial High Court’s “no case” ruling, filing an appeal and requesting a stay of proceedings. Both the High Court and the Court of Appeal dismissed his stay applications. The High Court found that his repeated appeals were “dilatory” — a polite legal term for a deliberate strategy of delay. The state’s Deputy Attorney General, Justice Srem‑Sai, directly accused the defence of using such filings to obstruct the trial.
What Sovereign Environmental Justice Looks Like
Total Sovereignty Awareness does not stop at deconstruction. Reconstruction demands that we propose the alternative. The Wontumi case offers a clear blueprint for what sovereign environmental justice must achieve: one law, enforced without fear or favour.
- Same crime, same sentence: When a small‑scale miner is arrested and his equipment destroyed, the same punishment must follow for a politically connected operator. Justice cannot be class‑based.
- Seize the proceeds of environmental crime: The state must move beyond fines and bail to the seizure of assets acquired through illegal mining — including land, vehicles, and financial holdings.
- Transparent enforcement metrics: The Minerals Commission, EPA, and Forestry Commission must publish annual data on the number of politically connected individuals prosecuted, not just small‑scale arrests.
- Community right to know: Affected communities — those whose water is poisoned, whose farms are destroyed — must have a legally enforceable right to participate in environmental enforcement proceedings.
What You Can Do This Week
The Activation stage asks a direct question: what is the first actionable step? For the Wontumi case, the answer is singular and urgent: hold the judiciary to its own deadlines.
On 20 April 2026, the High Court issued a final ultimatum: Chairman Wontumi has until 5 May 2026 to file his witness statements and open his defence in the Samreboi case. If he fails to do so, the court has signalled that it will proceed to conviction.
- Share the court’s ultimatum. Public pressure on the timeline is the most effective antidote to judicial delay.
- Write to the Attorney General and the Judiciary. Demand that the Wontumi trial be concluded before the end of 2026, with full public disclosure of the verdict and sentencing.
- Amplify the voices of affected communities. The pollution of the Tano River is not an abstraction — it is poisoning real families. Their stories must be central, not peripheral.
- Support monitoring bodies. Organisations like the HELP Foundation Africa and OccupyGhana are doing the forensic work of tracking environmental impunity. Back their efforts.
Presiding judge Audrey Kocuvie‑Tay declined the request for adjournment, telling Wontumi’s lawyers that repeated filings do not suspend a trial. She ordered Boasiako to file his witness statements by May 5 2026. The judge indicated that proceedings will continue while the court awaits the appellate ruling. The prosecution has already called witnesses. The ball is in the defence’s court — and on the calendar.
Guilty of Impunity
Chairman Wontumi is presumed innocent until proven otherwise. That is the law. But the pattern of procedural delay, the blocking of a straightforward environmental prosecution with repeated appeals, and the sheer weight of the evidence — 13 hectares of a protected forest destroyed, the Tano River poisoned, over 40 excavators, pump‑action guns, a company mining after being told “no” — together constitute a larger indictment: that of a system that protects the politically powerful while the poor are criminalised.
The Wontumi case will be decided not solely on the facts, but on the integrity of the judicial process. If the trial concludes with a conviction and a sentence commensurate with the scale of the environmental destruction, it could mark a turning point in Ghana’s fight against elite impunity. If it fails — if the delays succeed, if the charges are reduced, if the political connections shield him from meaningful consequences — then the message will be unmistakable: in Ghana, environmental crime is a crime of the poor, not of the powerful.
The architecture of impunity is not yet dismantled. But the Wontumi case is a stress point. The question is whether Ghana’s courts will rise to the occasion — or whether they will become another exhibit in the prosecution of elite protectionism.
The jury question: If Wontumi is convicted, will his sentence be materially different from what a small‑scale galamsey operator would receive for destroying a fraction of one hectare? If the answer is no, then justice has a chance. If the answer is yes — or if he walks free — then Ghana’s environmental laws are not laws at all. They are costumes for the poor.
📚 PROSECUTION SOURCES & EXHIBITS
Daily Guide: Wontumi’s Forest Reserve Mining Trial Begins (April 2026)
GNA: Court adjourns illegal mining trial to April 30, 2026
Insight Ghana: Court gives Wontumi final chance to file defence
The Ghana Report: State drops charges against Akuoko, turns him into witness
GhanaWeb: Why I joined prosecution witness – Edward Akuoko speaks
GNA: Galamsey fight must target kingpins, financiers – HELP Foundation
GBC: Wontumi’s case raises questions on political accountability – Kwame Owusu Danso