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African Woman in Japan Pleads With Leaders to Fix Home Countries While Sharing Emotional Account of Identity Challenges Abroad

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A Nigerian woman living in Japan has shared an emotional video that’s gaining traction across Africa and the diaspora.

Her video reveals what she calls a painful reality about migration and identity for Africans living abroad and makes an urgent call for African leaders to develop their home countries.

The woman, identified online as Adadioramma, popularly known as “Naija Girl in Japan”, shared a deeply personal reflection on Instagram describing the emotional toll of living as a foreigner in a highly developed country—no matter how safe, beautiful, or advanced it may appear.

In the video, Adadioramma says that despite Japan’s world-class infrastructure and orderliness, there is a constant reminder that she does not belong.

“No matter how beautiful or developed a country is, once you are not originally from that country, you can really not be free,” she said. “There are some things that will always remind you that you don’t belong here.”

Fighting back emotion, she admitted that on some days the weight of being a foreigner becomes unbearable, leaving her with a strong desire to return home. Yet, she says, going back is not an easy option either, given the political, economic and social crises facing many African countries.

“Some days you just feel like packing up and going back home… but then it feels like going back home is not even an option,” she said, describing the dilemma as “standing between the devil and the deep blue sea.”

Adadioramma highlighted the structural and social barriers faced by Black foreigners in Japan, particularly those without permanent residency or citizenship. According to her, migrants are often restricted to certain types of jobs, struggle to rent accommodation without Japanese guarantors, and face subtle but persistent discrimination that reinforces their outsider status.

She also spoke about the racial profiling faced by Black people even when holding Japanese citizenship, noting that airport officials in other countries sometimes question the authenticity of a Japanese passport held by a Black person.

“They feel like Japanese people have to look a certain way,” she said. “So there’s really no winning.”

The most powerful moment of the video came when she turned her frustration into a direct plea to African leadership.

“I just beg our leaders—fix Africa, fix our countries,” she said. “Nobody deserves to go through all of this… the way they subtly tell you that you don’t belong.”

Her message has resonated widely among Africans at home and abroad, many of whom see her story as a reflection of the emotional cost of forced migration—where people leave not always by choice, but by necessity.

For many who viewed her video, Adadioramma’s testimony reflects a broader reality: true freedom and dignity are hardest to find away from home when home itself has failed its people.

Her plea adds to growing calls for accountable governance, economic opportunity, and human dignity across Africa—so migration becomes a choice, not an escape.

Taste GH

Smoke, Sweetness and Street Life: The Timeless Charm of Ghana’s Roasted Corn

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The smell reaches you before the sight of it—sweet, smoky, and unmistakably Ghanaian.

Along busy roads, outside markets, and at quiet neighborhood corners, roasted corn sizzles over glowing charcoal, turning a simple cob into one of the country’s most beloved street snacks.

In Ghana, roasted corn is more than something to nibble on; it is a small ritual woven into everyday life. Vendors fan open charcoal grills while rows of fresh maize slowly char, their golden kernels blistering and caramelising in the heat.

The result is a balance of flavours—naturally sweet corn deepened by a hint of smoke and a gentle crunch that gives way to juicy kernels.

During the maize harvest season, the snack becomes almost impossible to ignore. Stalls appear everywhere, from bustling city roads in Accra to quiet roadside stops in small towns.

Often, the corn is paired with fresh coconut, whose cool, milky sweetness perfectly complements the warm smokiness of the roasted kernels.

For many Ghanaians, roasted corn carries the taste of late afternoons and long journeys. Commuters buy it on their way home, students snack on it after school, and travellers reach for it during road trips across the country. It is affordable, filling, and surprisingly nutritious, rich in fibre and energy.

For visitors to Ghana, roasted corn offers something rare: a taste of daily life. No restaurant reservation is required—just follow the drifting aroma of charcoal and maize, and you will find one of Ghana’s simplest and most authentic culinary pleasures.

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Taste GH

Ivory Coast Roots, Ghanaian Soul: The Irresistible Rise of Akyeke and Tilapia

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While the world often obsesses over Ghana’s spicy rice dishes, those in the know look toward the coast for a texture and tang that is entirely singular: akyeke and tilapia.

If you walk through the bustling streets of Osu or find yourself seaside in Takoradi, the air is thick with the scent of salted, grilled fish and the fermented brightness of cassava.

Akyeke (pronounced a-check-eh) is the crown jewel of the Nzema people, though its popularity has swept across the nation. At first glance, it looks like couscous, but the similarity ends there.

Made from fermented, grated cassava, it carries a light, fluffy texture and a signature tartness that cuts through the richness of its accompaniments. It is almost always served with a plump, charcoal-grilled tilapia—the skin charred to a crisp, the flesh underneath steaming and succulent.

The magic, however, lies in the “sides.” A mountain of akyeke is crowned with a vibrant medley of diced tomatoes, onions, and spicy green chilies, all drizzled with high-quality coconut oil or crude palm oil.

It is a masterpiece of temperature and texture—cold, zesty vegetables meeting hot, oily fish. For the health-conscious traveler, it is a gluten-free powerhouse, offering sustained energy without the heaviness of fried starches.

Eating akyeke is an experience in balance. It’s the go-to lunch for the Ghanaian professional and the ultimate weekend indulgence for families.

For any visitor, it represents the true taste of West African coastal life: breezy, bold, and brilliantly fresh.

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Sights and Sounds

Walking Through History: The Powerful Experience of Visiting Cape Coast Castle

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The Atlantic breeze carries the sound of crashing waves as visitors step through the thick white walls of Cape Coast Castle. Outside, fishing boats rock gently along the shoreline and the sun glitters across the sea.

Inside, however, the air grows cooler and heavier. The narrow corridors, iron doors, and stone chambers tell a far deeper story—one that echoes across continents and centuries.

Standing prominently along the coast of Cape Coast, this imposing fortress is one of Ghana’s most powerful historical landmarks. Originally built by the Swedish in the 17th century and later expanded by the British, Cape Coast Castle became a central hub in the transatlantic slave trade.

Thousands of captured Africans were held within its dungeons before being forced through the infamous “Door of No Return,” a narrow passage leading directly to the Atlantic Ocean and the ships that carried them into slavery.

Walking through the castle today is an emotional journey. Guided tours lead visitors into the dimly lit male and female dungeons where captives were once confined in crowded, unsanitary conditions.

The silence inside these stone chambers often leaves visitors reflective. A short distance away sits the governor’s quarters—an unsettling contrast between the suffering below and the relative comfort above.

Yet Cape Coast Castle is not only a place of sorrow; it is also a place of remembrance and reconnection. For members of the African diaspora visiting Ghana, the site carries deep personal meaning.

Ceremonies and heritage tours often bring travelers from across the world seeking to understand their ancestry and reconnect with history.

Beyond the castle walls, the town itself offers lively coastal energy. Colourful fishing canoes line the beach, and the nearby Cape Coast Fishing Harbour buzzes with activity as fishermen bring in their daily catch.

Local markets, traditional dishes, and the rhythms of everyday Ghanaian life surround the historic site.

Travelers often pair a visit to the castle with nearby attractions such as Kakum National Park, famous for its rainforest canopy walkway, or Elmina Castle, just a short drive away.

Visiting Cape Coast Castle is not a typical sightseeing stop. It is a place that invites reflection, learning, and conversation.

As the ocean breeze sweeps through the ancient stone corridors, the past feels close—reminding visitors that understanding history is an essential part of shaping the future.

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