Hon. Davis Opoku, the Member of Parliament for Mpraeso, has called on the Government of Ghana to utilize the ongoing negotiations for GoldFields’ lease extension at its Tarkwa mine as a diplomatic lever to address the recurring xenophobic attacks in South Africa.
The lawmaker argues that as the South African mining giant pleads for a 20-year extension of its operations in the Western Region, Ghana finds itself in a unique position of strength to demand better protection for its citizens living and working in South Africa.
This strategic move, according to the MP, is not merely about mining rights but about the fundamental principle of reciprocity between the two nations.
“GoldFields is pleading with Ghana for a 20 year extension of its lease in Tarkwa. Perhaps this is also the moment for the Government to remind them that Ghana’s mineral resources have contributed immensely to the growth and development of South Africa’s economy.”
Hon. Davis Opoku

GoldFields, which has operated in Ghana for over three decades and recently faced the transition of its Damang asset to local ownership, is now seeking a long-term commitment at Tarkwa one of its most profitable global assets.
Hon. Opoku contends that while Ghana’s mineral resources have “contributed immensely” to the growth and development of the South African economy through the profits remitted by companies like GoldFields, the South African government must reciprocate this economic hospitality by ensuring the safety of Ghanaians.
Mineral Wealth as a Tool for Diplomatic Protection
The call for leverage comes at a time when the “resource-control push” in Ghana is gaining momentum.
For years, South African mining interests have flourished on Ghanaian soil, with GoldFields alone investing approximately $5 billion into its local operations since 2000.

Hon. Opoku’s stance highlights a growing sentiment that the economic benefits should not be a one-way street.
By conditioning or at least linking the 20-year lease extension to a diplomatic commitment from Pretoria, Ghana can move beyond “preaching in boardrooms” and demand “concrete and decisive steps” to safeguard the lives of the African diaspora.
This approach targets the economic heart of the relationship. The Tarkwa mine is a cornerstone of GoldFields’ portfolio, and a 20-year extension represents billions of dollars in future revenue for South African shareholders.
The MP suggests that the Ghanaian government reminds South African authorities that the same spirit of continental cooperation that allows their businesses to thrive in Tarkwa should be extended to the Ghanaian shoemaker or entrepreneur in Johannesburg.

Ending the Duality of African Unity
The lawmaker’s intervention addresses a painful duality in Ghana-South Africa relations: the contrast between elite corporate synergy and the lived reality of “Africans attacked on the street.”
While the Ghana Chamber of Mines reports that mining companies injected over $5.5 billion into the local economy in 2024, these figures do not mask the trauma of xenophobic violence that periodically displaces West African migrants.
Hon. Opoku argues that the “growth and development” of South Africa, fueled in part by Ghanaian gold, should provide the moral and economic basis for the South African state to act against domestic intolerance.

For the Mpraeso MP, the “innocent Ghanaians” contributing to the South African economy deserve the same level of security that Ghana provides to South African corporate giants.
The lease extension at Tarkwa is, therefore, more than a business transaction; it is a moment of reflection on the “aim to work hard and provide for families” that motivates both the multinational executive and the migrant laborer.
A New Frontier for Mining Diplomacy
While the Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources evaluates the GoldFields application, the MP for Mpraeso is pushing for a broader definition of “national interest.”

In his view, the national interest must encompass the safety of the sovereign people, even when they are outside the country’s borders. By using the Tarkwa lease as a bargaining chip, Ghana can force a high-level dialogue on human rights and regional integration.
This “extractive diplomacy” suggests that the era of granting long-term leases without considering the broader geopolitical treatment of Ghanaians may be coming to an end.
As GoldFields seeks to secure its future in the Western Region for the next two decades, the message from Mpraeso is clear: African unity must be a tangible reality on the streets, not just a convenient slogan for securing mineral rights.
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