The Minister of Solid Minerals Development, Mr Kayode Fayemi, has promised to revoke all dormant mining licences this week.
Fayemi announced this during a one-day working visit to Kurupka site in Chanchaga Local Government Area of Niger State on Monday.
He said the administration would no longer accept operators who kept their licences idle, adding that they would be revoked and issued to genuine mining investors.
He noted that most of the land allocated as mining sites to miners were acquired illegally.
He said the ministry would begin formalisation of illegal miners into a structure to enable them to earn their livelihood in a safe environment and according to the world standard .
“We want them to form a cooperative to enable us to give them a structure that the ministry can work with and anybody that refuses to be part of the structure will face the law.
“We are not going to allow illegal mining to continue; we will bring it to an end; we are not depriving them, but we want to meet up with the Mining Act of 2007,” he said.
He promised that the Federal Government would devise means of assisting them with necessary equipment and financial support among others.
Mr Edward Danladi, the Vice Chairman, Miners Association of Nigeria, called for synergy among the federal, states and other stakeholders to help tackle illegal mining in the state and other parts of the country.
Danladi called on the ministry to provide adequate inspection vehicles for its staff in the state for effective monitoring of areas under exploration lists.
He explained that the illegal miners were mostly sponsored by the Chinese, Botswana, Cameroonians and Niger Republic citizens.
The Emir of Minna, Alhaji Farouk Bahago who received the minister and the ministry’s minister of state in his palace, expressed appreciation of their plans to legalise mining in the state.
Bahago urged the minister to assist the people with loans and standard equipment to perform their mining activities.






