Paul Adom-Otchere has voiced his dissatisfaction with Sarkodie’s response to the claims made by Yvonne Nelson in her book.
Sarkodie’s “Try Me” response, according to Paul Adom-Otchere, was inappropriate, he said during his Good Evening Ghana show.
Paul asserts that he thinks Sarkodie ought to retract his comments in front of Yvonne Nelson and the general public.
“In my opinion, Sarkodie owes Yvonne and the readers of her book an apology. While it is true that Yvonne may have revealed something she shouldn’t have, she is trying to play the victim and exploit the story,” he said.
“However, the story she shared is true, so Sarkodie should have apologized to the public and said, ‘I’m sorry, I was too young.’ We don’t want young boys to think it is acceptable to engage in unprotected sex, impregnate a woman, and agree to abort,” Paul Adom Otchere added.
Paul Adom-Otchere responded to the argument that Sarkodie didn’t have a personal doctor at the time of Yvonne’s abortion by pointing out that Sarkodie was a successful musician in 2010.
“We cannot label Sarkodie as poor in 2010. He may not have been as successful as he is today, such as reaching the BET level, but he was not struggling either,” Paul Adom-Otchere said.
Relatively, the song “Try Me” by Sarkodie has been taken down from Apple Music, but the Ghanaian musician hasn’t done anything wrong.
On Wednesday, June 28, 2023 at 1:4am, the witty Ghanaian tweeted a link to the song that was posted on his YouTube channel.
He wrote the song in response to Yvonne Nelson’s book, “I Am Not Yvonne,” which was published. In the book, Yvonne criticized the Ghanaian rapper for getting her pregnant and failing to accept responsibility when he advised her to have the baby aborted.
The song used to be on Apple Music and Spotify, but those streaming services have since taken it down.
The producer of Sarkodie’s “Try Me,” MOG Beatz, has come forward to address the reports regarding the song’s disappearance in a post shared on his Twitter page.