According to him, rather than receiving help to alleviate the pain he was experiencing and the trauma of the family who lost their child, Ghanaians were instead criticizing him.
“When I see accidents on television, I sympathize with the victims. However, when I had my accident, no one sympathized with me.
Instead, they criticized me and called for my accountability. It was made to seem as if I had intentionally killed the child, who was in his father’s car. I was expecting that people would help alleviate my pain and that of the family, but instead, they criticized me. I questioned God for bringing me to this country,” he said in an interview on the Believers Morning Show.
“I think my life after the accident has been like a movie. I am acting out a movie called ‘A Country Called Ghana.’ I’m not sure all those who followed the story loved me because if they did, they would not be criticizing me but rather sympathizing with me for the challenges I am facing. Instead of pleading with the child’s family to forgive me, they are fanning the flames of the issue. I even believe some people are not happy that I’m alive, but what they want is not the will of God,” he added.