If You Want My Silence, Give Me GHC 10,000- Deborah Adablah Tells Critics
Deborah Seyram Adablah, who is colloquially known as the most famous side chick in the world, appears to be engaged in a confrontational situation with Ghanians on social media, as they criticize her extensively for the aforementioned incident.
In a video posted on Instagram by Nkonkonsa, Debbie confidently expressed that if the trolls aimed to silence her, they should compensate her with GHC 10,000. She emphasized that in her culture, people are silenced through financial means rather than through insults.
In conclusion, she firmly stated that if social media users desired her to acknowledge their opinions about her, it would require monetary compensation rather than insults.
“Where we originate from, if you want to make someone go quiet, you give that person money like GHC10K or whatever you have in your capacity and tell them it’s okay.
“You don’t make them go quiet with insult. What will happen with the insult? Will it take my beauty or my hairline? Insults don’t do anything to anybody. My essence is not with you, it is with me. If you want someone to take your opinion, you use money”, she added.
The highly publicized case involving Deborah Seyram Adablah, who accused an ex-Chief Finance Officer of a bank, Ernest Kwasi Nimako, of sexual harassment came to an end a few days ago.
The court has dismissed Adablah’s case, ruling that while their relationship was deemed immoral and not socially acceptable, there was no legal basis for her claims against Nimako. Justice John Bosco Nabarese presided over the case and delivered the verdict on November 28th.
The court said the foundation of the relationship was one that the court should not be invited to give judicial stamps to, adding, “You cannot recover the price of something you have committed into an immoral act.”
The court has imposed a penalty of GH¢10,000 on the plaintiff. This decision was made in response to the application filed by the bank’s former Chief Finance Officer, who requested the court dismiss Adablah’s case.