“The steel bender whose child’s hospital bills I paid stole all my iron rods. He came here at dawn with a vehicle and took away the iron rods meant for the construction of my building up to the third floor.”
— A Ghanaian woman laments after a steel bender she trusted allegedly stole all the iron rods intended for her storey building, despite her having previously paid the hospital bills of his child.
🇬🇭 “Car dealers, now you’re crying. You buy cars in Canada for just $2,500 and sell them to us for over GH¢1.5 billion. Now we know the process, and we won’t be buying from you anymore.”
— A Ghanaian man has vented his frustration at car dealers, accusing them of overpricing vehicles despite purchasing them at much lower prices abroad. He said he now understands how the business works and has vowed not to buy from Ghanaian car dealers again.
🎥: WISEMAN EMPIRE
A young Ghanaian woman named Belinda, who lives in Germany, is pleading with Ghanaians for help finding her biological father. Born in Ghana but raised abroad, she has longed to meet him for many years. After recently speaking with her mother, she obtained more details and hopes someone may recognize him or his family.
Belinda’s parents met in the Ipaja area of Lagos State, Nigeria, where her father, known as Issah, worked at an aluminium company owned by Mr. Tony. Around 1984–1985, while her mother was pregnant, Issah traveled abroad and contact with him was lost. He had ties to the Kasapi and Gambia Number One areas in the Ahafo Region, where the family house was close to the station. Her paternal grandfather was a Muslim man who lived near a mosque and was popular in the area for always calling the Adhan (the call to prayer). Her father had several siblings, including an older brother named Amado and sisters Hawa and Samata.
“Forgive me and take me back into your heart as your child. My life has been difficult ever since you became angry with me for not coming to see you while I was in Ghana.”
— A Ghanaian man abroad went down on his knees and apologized to his angry father for failing to visit him after he landed in Ghana, despite all that his father had done for him, including helping him travel abroad
“We earn GH¢20 from every bag of plantain we pack, and if you have many customers, you can make over GH¢1,000 a day.”
— Chairman of the Agogo Plantain Packers reveals
LIVE | Minister for Roads and Highways, Kwame Governs Agbodza, issues a two-month ultimatum to Maripoma Enterprise Limited to complete 20% of the work on the Wenchi–Sawla Lot 7 road project or risk contract termination.
I’m sure you’ve heard about Pastor Jerry Eze’s Foundation giving out $720,000 to 240 young entrepreneurs.
God bless him for that. I love and respect the man.
But here’s a lesson some churchgoers need to sit with.
When it was time to select who got the money, Pastor Jerry, the same man who preaches miracles and unmerited favor, hired KPMG, one of the world’s top consulting firms, to go through the applications and find the most qualified candidates.
The criteria did not include:
Who speaks in tongues the longest.
Who pays the highest tithes.
Who bought the oil of prosperity last Sunday.
Who fasted seven days for divine favor.
Who shouts “fire” the loudest during deliverance.
He hired KPMG. Not a prophet. Not an usher. Not his most loyal church member. A firm that evaluates business structure, financial records, turnover, industry viability, and legal registration.
Dedicated tongue-talker with no business records? Nothing for you.
Seed-sower who never structured a business? Nothing for you.
Because when real money is on the line, even the pastor plays by business rules.
This is not an attack on faith or those who are devoted to God. It is a call to start separating your devotion from your development. Your pastor is studying balance sheets while teaching you to sow seeds. Study what he does, not just what he says.
Businesses do not grow through tongues. They grow through structure, discipline, and strategy.
Separate your spirituality from your business principles. Both can coexist. But they are not the same tool.
"We Shall Not Watch Him Die" – Ibrahim Mahama Pledges to Cover $88,000 Surgery for YOLO Star Drogba
In a heartwarming display of compassion, Ghanaian businessman and philanthropist Ibrahim Mahama has stepped in to save the life of popular actor Drogba, famously known for his role in the youth series YOLO.
Drogba has been battling a serious demyelinating neurological condition that requires urgent surgery costing $88,000. Facing financial constraints, the young actor had made a public appeal for help as his health continued to deteriorate.
Mahama, moved by the situation, has now promised to fully fund the life-saving procedure.
In a powerful statement, the philanthropist declared:
“We shall not watch him die. I will cover all costs. I promised him.”
This timely intervention brings renewed hope to Drogba and his loved ones, highlighting the impact of generosity in moments of crisis.