Residents of Ekumfi Twa in the Ekumfi Constituency in the Central Region of Ghana have shared their resentment over rituals often carried out by one, Pastor Emmanuel Asopiah of The True Shepherd Ministry International in the area.
Residents claim to have spotted the pastor on two different occasions in an act usually performed by unbelievers.
The previous act by the Man-of-God per reports raised a serious eyebrow, as residents angrily called him to order, only to witness a repetition of his ridiculous act on Sunday, April 16, 2023 midnight.
A report by Sompa TV's Eric Annan reveals, the Pastor has been in Ekumfi Twa for the past two years to establish a branch of his father's church which has its headquarters situated at Kasoa in the Awutu Senya East District in the Central Region.
Pastor Emma, as popularly known in the area is said to have been spotted on Sunday with some chiefs of Ekumfi Twa to perform rituals at the community’s Ancestral Forest with bottles of Schnapp, a red scarf, notes of Gh¢5, and a sheep with the Man-of-God holding a cutlass.
Alhaji Amidu, Regent of Ekumfi Twa narrated the pastor's recent actions to be his third time on such an absurd act.
He remarked Pastor Emma to have previously bound a white scarf to a pawpaw true and subsequently accompanied others to bury a corpse at dawn having equally killed a sheep and spread its blood across the village.
The ruler has called on the police to take a look into the matter as residents demand the pastor evacuated from his place of settlement.
Ama Salomey, an eyewitness to the incident recounted shock over the pastor's act as she disclosed to find notes of Ghana cedis, bottles of schnapp, a tied black scarf together with an animal's blood in a bottle under a tree the next morning.
Bishop Frederick Asopiah, General Overseer of The True Shepherd Ministry International over the issue of his junior pastor told Sompa News, he will by the close of the week go for his church items to close down his church at Ekumfi Twa to let barking dogs lie.
Source: Sompaonline.com/Eric Annan