How Dr Kwame Fordjour scammed 20 students of GH₵ 15OOO surfaces online

I guess you’ve heard about Dr UN who is currently dominating the headlines of several articles on various blogs and other news portals.

Dr Kwame Fordjour took over social trends after he was seriously busted for dishing out fake citations and sham awards to Ghanaian celebs and other renowned personalities on Friday August 28th 2020 in the name of UN.

Well, the local cyberspace has become overly dramatic citing from the trolls and swift deletion of photos the awardees shared on their social media pages.

As Dr UN’s wahala continues to worsen and the negative attention he has courted for himself also keeps skyrocketing, a former academic mentor of his has dropped more dirty secrets about the con artist.

Sighting from a Facebook post authored by Jones Gyedu who claims to have known Dr Kwame Fordjour for the past 25 years now, the scammer duped the parents of 20 students of GH₵ 15OOO as far back 2004.

With the promise of facilitating their admission to KNUST which never manifested so the parents had to aggressively confront him for their monies.

Read Gyedu’s post on how Dr Kwame Fordjour scammed the 20 parents below;

In 2004, the parents of a pupil staying at Kwadaso, Kumasi, contracted me teach their ward science and mathematics in their house. When they found out I lived at Santasi, they asked me if I knew “Wyclef”. Of course, I knew because that was his nickname at Technology Secondary School (now KNUST SHS). So I told the family I knew him.

Then they shared the story. He had taken GHC1,500 (Fifteen million Cedis at the time, before redenomination) from 20 students with the promise of facilitating their admission to KNUST. Make no mistake, ‘fifteen million cedis’ at the time was huge money. When the school started shipping out admission letters, the said students contacted him for feedback. He quickly asked them to organize more money and meet him in front of the KNUST Administration block for their admission letters. Yes, in front of the Administration Block itself.

The couple told me they also paid the money to secure a place for their first child who was seeking admission. Then WyClef showed up with an elderly man whom they didn’t know but the description they gave me fitted that of his father. There, you pay the top up, and your “admission letter” was handed over to you. The 20 students and their parents/guardians formed a queue there.

Source: Gossips24.com

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