Political activist and entertainment commentator Kwame A Plus questioned whether Wendy Shay’s claims that a spiritual attack caused her accident were a publicity gimmick. Wendy Shay, a singer from Ghana, responded to his remarks.
Kwame A Plus refuted Wendy Shay’s assertion that her accident was the result of spiritual attacks and asserted that it was intended to create publicity during a discussion on UTV’s United Showbiz.
“We cannot say it is spiritual. It is all for the hype. First Bullet said he would be flying her to Germany for treatment. Now they are saying that it is spiritual. They know what they are doing. It’s called a stunt, and they are doing it well,” said A Plus on the show hosted by MzGee.
Wendy Shay has responded to Kwame A Plus‘s claims by asserting that spiritual attacks on the music industry are real and that the majority of those affected have protection.
She reiterated that she would have been killed if it weren’t for God’s protection and that the public should disregard Kwame A Plus’s comments because they were obvious lies.
“Spiritual attacks are real in the music industry, and they are aware. Do not feed into the lies. All these people declaring otherwise are protected by certain forces.
“Up and coming artiste before you get in the industry get spiritual backing. If not for God I would have been killed and you are there talking about hype. Ghana wake up! #Lovemenow” Wendy Shay wrote on her X (formerly Twitter)page.
She discredited A Plus’s remarks as untrue and urged the general public not to take them at face value.
She emphasized the value of spiritual defense for aspiring artists and attributed her survival to God’s defense.
Spiritual attacks are real in the music industry and they are aware. Do not feed into the lies. All these people declaring otherwise are protected by certain forces. Up and coming artiste before you get in the industry get spiritual backing. If not for God I would have been…
— Enigma EP (@wendyshaygh) October 2, 2023
Meanwhile, Dr. Sonnie Badu claims he is unconcerned if Ghanaian DJs, fellow gospel musicians, or the media sabotage him.
In an interview with DJ Slim on Daybreak Hitz on Thursday on Hitz FM, he made this claim.
He took a deep breath and responded, “Yes,” when asked if he still feels marginalized by Ghanaian gospel performers, DJs, and the media, “I don’t care anymore, ɛnfa meho,” repeating the same statement in Twi.