Ghanaian actor, Adjetey Anang plays accentuated the part of storytelling in resolving cultural issues like unlawful mining, privately alluded to as galamsey.
Answering an inquiry regarding the significance of the creative industry in the battle against unlawful mining, the ‘Things We Do for Love’ star explain that creatives hold huge impact, which can be more successfully communicated through their art than through fights.
“We’ve become the best at coordinating these issues into the stories we tell. Assuming you focus on our creations, you’ll see that we quietly embed references to major problems like galamsey. It permits crowds to partake in the entertainment while likewise perceiving that difficult issues are being featured. That is where we ought to make our voices heard — by stirring things up around town, yet through our work,” he explain in a interview on Accra based 3FM.
In any case, Anang said he is in help for exhibits on vital issues like galamsey, if they are led legitimately.
His comments follow a new three-day show coordinated by A majority rules system Center on September 17, pointed toward constraining the public authority to make a more grounded move against galamsey, which is hurting water bodies and woods.
Be that as it may, around 40 dissidents were captured and kept for purportedly committing different offenses during the dissent, igniting public clamor and requires their delivery.