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Social Media User exposes Abena Korkor, reveals how she spent 18 months in Jail for drug trafficking

It seems Mental Health Advocate and Former TV3 Presenter Abena Korkor story is more intense than what we see on the surface.

Abena suffers from Bipolar Disorder which sometimes makes her relapse and drops certain shocking information which are very explicit. She even revealed that she becomes very sensitive when she relapse.

While the whole country was talking about a list she dropped recently, a social media user has called on Ghanaians to have pity on her.

Mikdad Mohammed on social media after watching Abena’s Video has recounted her life story which led to her current trauma.

He wrote”

Defiled at 5 by a 13-year old neighbour, made it to Aburi Girls where the signs were on the wall, had her first mental relapse in a University campus where she was a fast rising student activist super brilliant in class, lost her true love and friends, later jailed in New York for 18 months for trafficking heroine to pay for her Ukraine Medical School admission because the boss at the Scholarship Office allegedly wanted sex the very moment his eyes saw her, the story of Abena Korkor is as pathetic as it is sad; revolving around men (and some women) who craved for the banging body but overlooked the mental challenge upstairs, which has led many in her shoes to suicide when help didn’t come. Betrayed by her friends, unable to hold down any job and bouts of relapse later, we want to judge her and make her the object of mockery or hate? No. It can’t be right. And without passing any judgment on any specific man, anyman who unzips before [an occasionally] “mentally challenged” person no matter the context, should know he’s signing an “anything-can-happen-later” agreement with the tip of his penis. The story of Abena Korkor is the story of a damsel going through a tough time and almost everyone who tried to help ended up eating her cookie, of course with her consent. The girl just deserves sympathy and support. Her predicament speaks to the neglect of mental issues in our homes, in our schools, in our courts and in the corridors of our government where resources are allocated to solve our problems. I don’t know her. Have never met her. I don’t know anybody who knows her but just like I did for Irbard, I am providing an intellectual divergence, even if amateurish at which heart is the need to rethink our approach to mental health.

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