Ken Agyapong vs Atta Akyea: Alex Tetteh invoke curses on former MP over alleged meeting with Ken
A public dispute between two senior politicians has taken an unusual turn after a traditional curse was invoked. The row began when Kennedy Agyapong accused Samuel Atta Akyea of making disparaging remarks about former President Nana Akufo-Addo during a private meeting in 2016. Atta Akyea has strongly denied the claims, calling them false and demanding evidence.
The controversy started earlier this week when Kennedy Agyapong appeared on UTV. He alleged that, during a 2016 conversation at Heathrow Airport, Samuel Atta Akyea had spoken negatively about Nana Akufo-Addo. Atta Akyea responded on Wednesday, December 17, 2025, rejecting the accusations and questioning why Agyapong would reveal what was meant to be a private discussion.
In a surprising escalation, Alex Tetteh, a member of Agyapong’s communications team, performed a traditional ritual to invoke curses. The ceremony included the slaughter of a lamb and was aimed at summoning spiritual consequences if Atta Akyea was lying about the meeting. Tetteh also extended the invocation to anyone spreading falsehoods about Agyapong. Atta Akyea has maintained his innocence, insisting no such meeting took place. He challenged Agyapong to provide proof, arguing that the public disclosure of a private conversation—if it had happened—would reflect poorly on Agyapong’s integrity and trustworthiness.
The dispute has now moved beyond political arguments into a spiritual confrontation. Atta Akyea continues to deny the allegations, while Agyapong’s team has taken ritualistic steps to enforce what they claim is the truth. The outcome of this unusual clash remains uncertain, with no resolution yet in sight.
Read also:
- American teenagers taking up farming roles previously filled by immigrants, a concept revisited from 1965's labor market shift.
- Weekly affairs in the German Federal Parliament (Bundestag)
- Landslide claims seven lives, injures six individuals while they work to restore a water channel in the northern region of Pakistan
- Escalating conflict in Sudan has prompted the United Nations to announce a critical gender crisis, highlighting the disproportionate impact of the ongoing violence on women and girls.