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The Week We Forgot About Cocoa and Talked About a Russian Instead

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If you blinked, you missed it. Between Monday’s rush and Wednesday’s lunch, Ghana’s social media forgot about cocoa prices, forgot about politics, and spent two full days arguing about a Russian man none of us had heard of before.

The Yaytseslav Situation

His name is Vyacheslav Trahov. Online, he goes by Yaytseslav. And for 48 hours, he owned Ghanaian Twitter.

The man walked around Accra Mall with Meta glasses, approached women, struck up conversations, and filmed everything. Some ended up at his apartment. Some ended up on his Telegram channel, where subscribers pay $5 a month for content too explicit for YouTube.

By Tuesday, the timeline had split into factions. One side called the women “cheap.” Another side pointed out the obvious: a foreigner secretly filming intimate encounters and monetising them without consent isn’t exposing anything except his own criminality.

By Wednesday evening, the Russian was reportedly deleting Ghana content from his channels. The consensus? Ghanaians don’t play that game.

Meanwhile, the 5G News Dropped

Buried under the Russian drama, Next Gen Infraco quietly launched commercial 5G operations. Available in parts of Accra, Kumasi, and Tamale now. Nationwide coverage promised by March 2027, just in time for Ghana @70.

The Duabo King Lesson

The same week, TikToker Duabo King learned that views have consequences. He posted a video accusing Kumasi police officers of misconduct with commercial workers. Under interrogation, he admitted fabricating the whole thing. Just wanted to trend.

He’s now in police custody—the charge: publication of false news with intent to cause fear and panic.

And Heritage Month Started

March 3 kicked off Heritage Month 2026 with a simple call from the Tourism Minister: See Ghana, Eat Ghana, Wear Ghana, Feel Ghana. Culinary showcases, regattas, and festivals running through March. Probably worth more attention than a Russian with a hidden camera.

But the algorithm decides, doesn’t it?

Reels & Social Media Highlights

How a Boxer’s Tears and an Actor’s Ambition Defined Saturday in Ghana

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If you scrolled through your timeline in Ghana today, you didn’t just see news; you witnessed a revolution in how we shop, fight, and vote.

The biggest noise came from the asphalt of Accra, where Kumawood legend Agya Koo traded his acting scripts for a political manifesto. Videos of him trekking to register the Ghana First Party have broken the internet.

While critics call it a stunt, the “Third Force” chatter is resonating with voters tired of the NPP/NDC status quo.

But politics wasn’t the only battleground. Over at the Accra Mall, Dulcie Boateng proved she is the undisputed heavyweight of commerce.

Her Porials Pitch market drew thousands, proving that the influencer economy is now the backbone of Ghanaian retail.

Yet, the most sobering moment came from a true champion. Abigail Kwartekaa, the country’s first female boxing champion, went viral with a heartbreaking revelation: after winning her belt, the Association gave her “nothing.”

As she fights for recognition, Ghana is being forced to ask hard questions about how we treat our female heroes.

Why it resonated: Ghanaians are tired of waiting for change—whether it’s in the economy, governance, or sports. Today was about taking matters into your own hands.

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Unpaid Teachers, ‘Spiritual’ Water, and Viral Family Drama

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Ghanaian social media is buzzing this morning with a mix of political outrage, entertainment controversy, and relatable family humor.

#PayTheTeachers dominates conversations after the Coalition of Unpaid Teachers picketed the Ministry of Finance yesterday. Some educators claim they’ve worked up to 18 months without salaries.

The protest turned viral when Netherlands-based influencer Mr. Happiness, a known Mahama supporter, publicly blasted the President: “I campaigned for you… pay the teachers”. The hashtag #HarunaWoDeYeKa to wit “Haruna, you owe us” is trending nationwide.

Over in entertainment, Stonebwoy is facing backlash after allegedly spraying ‘spiritual’ water on fans at the TGMA Xperience Concert in Koforidua. Critics call it a “demonic cleansing,” while fans argue it was just to “reduce the heat”. The debate over the line between performance and spirituality is raging.

Meanwhile, for some comic relief, TikToker Mighty is dodging slaps after pranking his mum into signing her up for a dating app. Her furious reaction—“Don’t you know I’m a married woman?”—has sparked hilarious threads about Ghanaian motherhood.

From economic hardship to celebrity culture and family values, these trends reflect a nation using humour and outrage to navigate a tough economic period.

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Reels & Social Media Highlights

Dark Streets, Empty Wallets & A Data Heist: Ghana’s Internet is Boiling

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Log into Facebook or X in Ghana today, and you’ll find a nation holding three simultaneous breakdowns—one economic, one physical, and one digital.

First, the wallet. Following a brutal April 1st fuel hike (Petrol now ~GH¢13.30), the hashtag #CostOfLiving has turned into a raw diary of survival.

Opposition leader Richard Ahiagbah’s viral post—“Ghanaians are suffering”—ignited a political firestorm, with citizens demanding answers from the Mahama administration while NPP supporters pile on with “we told you so” screenshots.

Second, the darkness. A gritty grassroots campaign, #FixTheStreetLights, is impossible to escape. Influencer KalyJay sparked a viral trend of grainy night videos showing Accra’s major roads plunged into pitch black.

Motorists are sharing near-miss accident clips; residents are linking the blackouts to a rise in armed robberies. The tag is now being blasted at Greater Accra’s Regional Minister hourly.

Finally, the breach. A court ruling against Vodafone Ghana for violating customer privacy has opened old wounds. The scathing comment “Ursula’s sins!”—referencing former minister Ursula Owusu-Ekuful—is trending, as Ghanaians question who really protects their mobile money data.

Three crises, one timeline. Today, Ghanaians aren’t just scrolling—they are shouting into the void, hoping someone turns on the lights.

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