
A Ghanaian prophet has made a striking declaration about one of the country’s most recognisable political figures, insisting that Kennedy Ohene Agyapong’s road to the presidency is spiritually foreclosed — and that the matter is beyond argument.
Nana Asamoah Nyamekye, a Ghanaian prophet, issued the bold proclamation during an appearance on Angel FM’s evening drive programme, hosted by Docta Kay — a platform that frequently draws listeners into the intersection of faith, politics, and national conversation.
The declaration was unambiguous.
“I don’t hate Hon. Ken, but from what I saw, it is not part of his destiny to be President of Ghana. There is nothing to be argued about this,” the prophet told the host, carefully distancing the statement from personal animosity or political allegiance.
Nana Asamoah Nyamekye was explicit that his words were not rooted in bias or emotion, but in what he describes as a spiritual revelation — a vision, he said, that left him with no room for doubt. The presidency, he maintained, simply does not figure in the trajectory mapped out for Agyapong.
Kennedy Ohene Agyapong is no ordinary subject for prophetic commentary. One of Ghana’s most outspoken and influential politicians, the former Assin Central Member of Parliament has spent decades commanding attention — both for his unfiltered style and his genuine political weight within the New Patriotic Party (NPP).
His presidential ambitions, frequently aired and widely discussed, have made him a fixture in conversations about the future direction of the NPP and Ghanaian governance broadly. It is precisely that profile that has amplified the prophet’s remarks.
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When a prophecy targets someone of Agyapong’s stature, it rarely stays confined to the airwaves.
Prophetic declarations of this nature are deeply woven into Ghana’s media and religious fabric. Religious leaders routinely step into the public square with predictions about political figures, electoral outcomes, and the fate of the nation — and these pronouncements consistently ignite debate, drawing both fervent believers and sharp sceptics.
For some, Nana Asamoah Nyamekye’s words carry the weight of divine foreknowledge. For others, they represent personal opinion dressed in spiritual language. The divide between those two camps, predictably, has opened up around this latest declaration.
What remains unchanged is the fundamental nature of such claims: there is no electoral or factual framework through which a prophecy of this kind can be confirmed or disproved. It belongs, ultimately, to the realm of belief — subject to the faith of those who receive it and the scrutiny of those who do not.
For now, at least one prophet insists the answer has already been written — elsewhere.