Ghana has become a country where mediocrity is protected and excellence is attacked. And nothing illustrates this national sickness more than the sabotage directed at Alex Apau Dadey.
Here is a man who built an empire without political handouts. A man who modernized systems the state itself couldn’t fix. A man who poured millions into education, health, youth development, and national revenue.
And what does he get in return?
Bureaucratic harassment. Political suspicion. Institutional sabotage.
A calculated, cold-blooded attempt to cripple a homegrown visionary.
This is not mere resistance—it is betrayal. Betrayal of enterprise. Betrayal of innovation. Betrayal of Ghana’s future.
While other nations protect their innovators, we target ours. While others celebrate builders, we hunt them down with regulations weaponized as punishment.
How long will we keep crucifying the very people carrying this country on their backs?
Ghana cannot develop while destroying its developers. It cannot claim to want a digital economy while strangling the people digitizing it. It cannot talk about progress while persecuting progress itself.
If this country continues down this path, the question will not be whether visionaries like Dadey stay or leave—it will be whether Ghana has any future left at all.