MOROTO, Uganda
More than 50 trucks transporting marble and limestone from Moroto district in northeastern Uganda have been impounded on suspicion of transporting minerals without a valid license.
The operation
which started on Monday mainly affected drivers transporting limestone from
Kosiroi in Moroto district to Tororo Cement Ltd factory in eastern
Uganda.
The operation
led by the Moroto regional police commander, SSP Gerald Tushime also resulted
in the arrest of scores of drivers. He said the trucks would be cleared on
condition that Tororo Cement complies with licensing and tax policies and
mining regulations as set by the government.
Tushime said
the operations will continue until sanity returns to the mining sector in south
Karamoja, which is threatened by the black market and a chain of middlemen. He
added that the government was losing billions of shillings as a result of
dubious activities in the mining sector.
Tushime warned
that the drivers would be held responsible and face charges of transporting
minerals illegally, contrary to provisions of the Minerals Act. According to
the act, no one is allowed to process, smelt, refine, fabricate, cut, blast,
polish, store, transport or trade-in minerals or otherwise deal in or possess
commercial quantities of minerals without a licence issued by the minister.
"We’re
telling them; go and tell your people [superiors] and have these documents in
place. The operations will continue because it was realised that the ministry
and the government [are] losing a lot of revenue because it seems much of the
mining activities are on the black market. People are not bothered [with]
verification to prove that so and so is a dealer in minerals and has got a
licence. But never the less, right now they are our suspects because they are
driving these trucks and onboard they have stones. But these goods they are not
supposed to carry them without these documents." said Tushime.
The
enforcement comes weeks after a sensitization drive conducted jointly by the
police, officials of the ministry of Mineral Development and local government
officials across the mining communities and companies dealing in the mineral
sector. He adds that after the sensitisation, the police has now embarked on a
drive to ensure compliance with the law.
"They are
not having the dealer’s licence and the movement permits. All these documents
are given by the ministry and for us, as police, it is enforcement to ensure
compliance. We have the Police Minerals Protection Unit, it is in the lead of
handling these operations but before we did the operation, we had to sensitise
these people." added Tushime.
Robert Mugabe,
one of the affected drivers for Tororo Cement, said the issue of a license is a
management issue for which drivers should not be arrested.
"They
have been telling us but that permission - the dealers' licence, it was expired
but it is in the process of renewing it and they were informed but they are
still impounding our vehicles. For us we’re drivers, we do not know what is
going on in the office. We just take the vehicle and we bring it back."
Mugabe said.
Another driver
who identified himself as Maluku said this was an issue between the company and
government and that drivers had no control over it.
Emmanuel
Lokii, the secretary production and marketing in Moroto district local
government welcomed the police operation saying many miners were flouting the
regulations and were often bent on exploiting the local community. URN could
not get a comment from Tororo Cement.
Gerald Eneku,
the inspector of mines in Karamoja noted that there were guidelines by the
minerals ministry to ensure all miners in the sub-region complied with the
licensing and taxation regulations.
Despite its
rich minerals wealth, Karamoja remains Uganda's poorest region with more than
61 per cent of its 1.2 million people living in absolute poverty according to
statistics from the Uganda Bureau of Standards, 2016.
Karamoja’s collective GDP accounts for less than 1 per cent of Uganda’s total GDP (USAID, 2017) with the proportion of people trapped in chronic poverty as high as 24 per cent, twice higher more the national average of 10 per cent according to the Uganda National Housing Survey 2017.
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