Title: CIVIL SOCIETY AND EITI IMPLEMENTATION IN GHANA
1CIVIL SOCIETY AND EITI IMPLEMENTATION IN GHANA
- Dialogue, Critical and Constructive Engagement
2The Road So Far Traversed
- CSOs in Ghana have been partners in the EITI
tri-partite arrangement since the inception of
the initiative in Ghana - Partnered the other stakeholders in a massive
sensitization drive, following launch of the
initiative - Made input into the design, finalization, and
adoption of templates - Made input into the drawing of the Ghana work
programme - Contributed to the drafting of the Aggregators
ToR - Took part in the selection and interview of EITI
aggregator - Been part of all other implementation activities,
including discussions around audit reports
3The CSO Framework for Engaging in GHEITI
- Civil society participation had been marginal
from the onset. ISODEC was the only organisation
that was engaged in the process, serving on the
National Steering Committee (Nominated by
GAPVOD). - In Nov. 2004 ISODEC convenes a roundtable meeting
of organised civil society stakeholders, aimed at
broadening civil society participation in the
EITI process. The meeting provided a platform for
the adoption of a framework for civil society
engagement. - Today, ISODEC represents a 20-member coalition of
civil society organisations, including
faith-based organisations and organised labour
working under the banner of PWYP-Ghana.
4The CSO Framework for Engaging in GHEITI (Contd.)
- The Publish What You Pay-Ghana Campaign is part
of a wider global campaign for transparency in
extractive sector revenues, with the broad
objectives of - Mobilising civil society to engage with other
stakeholders in the implementation and monitoring
of the EITI process. - Promoting budget/revenue transparency at the
community level, through grass root participation
in budget/revenue tracking. - Eliminating corruption and revenue leakages in
the extractive sector. - Ensuring that the extractive sector contributes
positively to national development and poverty
reduction, especially in communities immediately
affected by extractive sector activities.
5The Genesis of PWYP-Ghana
- The formal launch of PWYP-Ghana was in 2006,
after two years of existence. The launch was
preceded by mobilization and sensitization
durbars in the four major mining enclaves in
Ghana, namely, Western, Eastern, Ashanti, and
Ahafo. - The community mobilization efforts were followed
with a strategic planning meeting which brought
together 50 signed up members of the coalition to
formulate an engagement strategy and action plan
for 2006-7. Having adopted the plan of action,
the Campaign was officially launched in Accra. - The challenge at the time was to organize the
citizenry of the four major mining enclaves,
incorporate them into the PWYP campaign, and
deepen their understanding of the essence of the
EITI initiative, and their role in realizing the
laudable goals of the initiative.
6Capacity Building Initiatives
- Following the launch of the coalition, we
embarked on a capacity-building drive. Our first
training workshop took place in Akim Oda in
November 2006. It was attended by 40 community
members drawn from the New Abirem concession area
of Newmont, representatives of the PWYP-Ghana
Steering Committee, representative of the
traditional authority of the Akim Kotoku area,
representative of the District Assembly, the
Coordinator of the national Multi stakeholder
Committee on EITI in Ghana, reps of GTZ, and
Newmont. - Topics treated at the workshop included the
Dichotomy of Mining and Development, the Legal
and Regulatory Framework of the Mining Sector
i.e. contracts, environmental impact assessment,
social responsibility agreements etc. It also
explored the mining sector revenue streams and
their disbursements. The principles and criteria
of the Extractive Industry Transparency
Initiative were also discussed.
7Capacity Building Initiatives (Contd.)
- The second took place from 11 13 January 2007
at Obuasi. - At the time, the Multi stakeholder Committee on
EITI was planning a national conference on EITI
implementation in Ghana for January 15, 2007 and
there was an urgent need to collate and firm-up
civil society demands and expectations of the
EITI process in Ghana. - The Workshop was on the theme Making Mineral
Revenue Work for the Poor. It was attended by 60
participants drawn mainly from in and around the
Oboasi Community, the PWYP-Ghana Steering
Committee, and four regional focal persons of the
Campaign. It was also attended by the Amansie
West District Finance Officer, the Community
Relations Officer of AngloGold Ashanti, and a
representative of the President of the Adansi
Traditional Council. Other participants were a
6-member delegation from Mongolia, who were then
in the country to learn from Ghanas civil
society experience with the EITI. PWYP-Ghana also
sponsored a 2-member delegation from Sierra Leone
to the event as part of its networking and for
the purpose of cross fertilization of ideas.
8Capacity Building Initiatives (Contd.)
- The workshop looked at the issues of Mining and
Development, focusing on the legal and regulatory
framework of the mining sector i.e. contracts,
environmental impact assessment, social
responsibility agreements etc. It also took an
overview of the mining sector revenue streams and
their disbursements. - Participants were then taken through the
Principles, Criteria, and Validation Process of
EITI the Role of Civil Society in the EITI
Process the Monitoring Framework for Effective
Engagement (Budgets / Revenue Tracking).
Participants had the opportunity to discuss the
EITI reporting templates, particularly the
sub-national template and how to engage with it. - The workshop again, provided the opportunity to
discuss and formulate a civil society response to
Ghanas EITI Inception Report, which was then in
its draft stage as well as collate and firm-up a
set of civil society demands on the Ghana
process.
9National Multi-stakeholder Conference
- GHEITI held its first National Conference on EITI
on January 15, 2007. - PWYP-Ghana sponsored 8 community members drawn
from the four mining enclaves to the conference. - It was an opportunity to re-state the PWYP-Ghana
demands on EITI which were to bring on board all
other legitimate concerns not captured in the
current framework, including other dimensions of
transparency, such as contracts, policy
formulation, regulatory regime, social and
environmental costs and compensation, and also
seek to bring on board other extractive sector
activities. - The demands also included the call to pursue EITI
within the context of a broader range of
complementary reform initiatives including - Reviewing the existing mining law to make it
consistent with the transparency requirements of
EITI. - Formulating in the shortest possible time, a
mining policy for the mineral sector. . - Passing the Right to information bill.
- Providing civil liberty guarantees, especially
for civil society activists. - Legislating the initiative to make disclosures
mandatory.
10Other Zonal Workshops
- The Oboasi community-based workshop was
replicated in the Western regional mining enclave
- Tarkwa (February 22 24, 2007), and the Ahafo
mining enclave - Sunyani (March 15 18, 2007).
All the workshops were given good coverage in the
local as well as national electronic and print
media.
11Communities Concerns
- In general, discussions at the workshops centred
on the relationship between mining companies and
the communities in which they operate. In
particular, issues of crop compensation, lack of
transparency in the disbursement of mineral
royalties from the Office of the Administrator of
Stool Lands, environmental cost and compensation,
livelihood insecurity, and human right abuses
perpetrated by mining companies, working in
tandem with state security agencies were the most
nagging concerns.
12Meeting With the World Bank
- On January 18, 2007 GTZ hosted a meeting between
World Bank Officials, including the Banks EITI
consultant Sefton Darby, and PWYP-Ghana. The
meeting was at the instance of the Bank and had
the purpose of obtaining a feedback from the
civil society mobilization events and workshops
as well as sharing the civil society perspective
on the EITI process so far. Discussions also
focused on constraints civil society was facing
with the EITI process and the management of the
mining sector in general. - PWYP-Ghana seized the opportunity to re-affirm
its demands on the process, as well as other
concerns of the communities which fall outside
the remit of EITI.
13Engagements Around EITI Reports
- Following the conclusion of the first Ghana EITI
report in February 2007, PWYP-Ghana commissioned
an expert in the U.K. to undertake a technical
review of the report, which is subsequently
referred to as the Murphy Critique. - Following the submission of the Murphy Critique,
a civil society technical roundtable was
organized to discuss the Ghana EITI report, with
the Murphy Critique serving as a reference
document. The roundtable drew participation from
the membership of the PWYP-Ghana coalition,
private legal practitioners, geologists from
academia, representatives of gender and
faith-based organizations. - The meeting provided the platform for
formulating a civil society response to the first
Ghana report, which was submitted at a national
stakeholder workshop on the report organized on
April 3, 2007.
14IMPACT OF OUR ACTIVITIES
- The cumulative outcome of our intervention has
been an increased awareness and a galvanized
community support for EITI implementation in
Ghana. - PWYP-Ghana has developed a draft Social and
Environmental Template for capturing social and
environmental impacts of mining, as well as
others for capturing revenue flows to the
districts. Community groups have been trained in
the use of these tools which are soon to be
deployed.
15Our Perspectives on the Usefulness of EITI
- EITI remains an incomplete balance sheet, but
presents opportunities for addressing some
revenue management and utilization concerns - Promoted stakeholder dialogue
- Help in adopting a consensus building approach to
extractive sector policy initiatives - For instance we have achieve consensus on
extending EITI to other natural resource sectors,
and also to revise the Aggregators Terms of
Reference to make the exercise more meaningful
than it has so far been.
16Challenges
- How to bring on other sectors such as forestry,
oil, and fisheries - The need to expand the MSG while ensuring that it
does not become unwieldy - The need to address the potential for role
conflict among secretariat staff, and to secure
the independence of the MSG - How to ensure the sustainability of the
initiative - THANK YOU for your attention