You Go Talk True, the local English term used for persons going through pain as a result of the pain they have inflicted on others is the message the CEO of the Ghana Free Zones Board (GFZB), Mr. Kwadwo Twum Boafo has been sending across to Hon. K.T Hammond the past few days.
In various interviews with sections of the media, Mr. Twum Boafo made it clear that the brouhaha Hon K.T Hammond is embroiled in which caused him to cry and lament at the sitting of the Judgment Debt Commission that his mother is dying, is simply nemesis catching up with him for all that he had done to Mr. Alfred Woyome.
Kwadwo Twum Boafo recalled that at the height of the judgment debt saga involving Alfred Woyome, Hon. K.T Hammond turned music composer cum choir master, composing the ‘ Woyome Woyome’ song and leading its singing on various platforms.
The GFZB boss said at the time Hon. K.T Hammond was rubbing it in, he did not care or consider the emotional pain he was inflicting on relatives, friends and loved ones of Alfred Woyome.
“K.T Hammond says his mother is dying in the village because of the accusations being leveled against him in the drill ship matter, but has he considered what Alfred Woyome’s mother is still going through because of the attacks on his son by K. T. Hammond? Or, he forgot that Woyome too has a mother” Kwadwo Twum Boafo said.
He said it is just poetic justice that the man who led the assault on Woyome is today being made to go through some of the pain he inflicted on the businessman. He therefore advised the Adansi Asokwa MP to take what is happening to him stoically and refrain from shedding crocodile tears in court.
Expanding the argument further, Kwadwo Twum Boafo reminded Ghanaians that Tsatsu Tsikata, Victor Selormey, Sipa Yankey and Kwame Peprah all have relatives yet the NPP did not take that into consideration when it was jailing them.
“K.T Hammond should understand that what is happening to him is simply nemesis catching up with him. The way forwards for him, therefore, is to just tell us the truth about how the $3.5 million was disbursed.