
Afua Asantewaa didn’t just sing for Sing-A-Thon records—she sang for recognition, resilience, and roots. But after being accused by TikToker Priscy of using her sing-a-thon for business and fraud, her silence broke in a bold, passionate message.
As the dust settles, gospel minister QueenLet emerges as a poised contender for her own record-breaking feat. This is the sound of three women defining 2024’s cultural narrative.
In a moment that has sent waves across social media, Ghanaian media personality, Afua Asantewaa has addressed harsh and personal attacks from a TikToker, setting the record straight in a passionate yet powerful monologue.
Her words, though emotionally charged, are more than a clapback—they are a testimony of strength, vision, and the journey of a woman determined to rise above the noise.
Afua Asantewaa, who captured national attention with her Guinness World Record sing-a-thon attempt, has been the subject of unfair criticism and unfounded accusations, including being labeled a fraud alongside her husband. For a woman who poured her heart and soul into her musical marathon, this kind of online dragging not only crosses boundaries but underscores a disturbing trend—women tearing down fellow women for clout.
In her address, Afua did not mention the TikToker by name, perhaps to deny her the very spotlight she desperately craves. “Women are supposed to support women,” Afua stated, “not drag each other down.” Her call is clear: in an era where digital platforms can amplify voices, we must choose to amplify the right ones—those rooted in truth, integrity, and empowerment.
This moment also casts a powerful spotlight on another Ghanaian woman of vision and voice—QueenLet, the spirit-filled gospel artist preparing for her own Guinness World Record sing-a-thon submission. Unlike Afua, whose attempt was ultimately not certified, QueenLet’s journey has just begun. But the foundation is different: one laid not in noise, but in preparation, strategy, and a prayerful commitment to excellence.
Two Women. One Purpose. Different Journeys.
What unites Afua Asantewaa and QueenLet is more profound than their Guinness aspirations—it’s their courage. To dream out loud. To sing until their voices give out. To represent Ghana on a global stage where women’s efforts are often scrutinized more than celebrated.
Afua’s raw words, though born from frustration, carry a deeper message. “They wish they had what I have,” she said. That “what” isn’t just fame—it’s vision. It’s impact. It’s legacy. QueenLet too, stands in that lineage. As she prepares to submit her own record-breaking gospel marathon, let it be known: this is not a competition between women, but a continuum of greatness.
Both women are examples of what it means to break barriers in the face of ridicule. Afua Asantewaa’s experience is not a failure—it’s a chapter. And QueenLet’s forthcoming sing-a-thon is not just a record attempt—it’s a message. A message to young African women that their voice matters. That endurance is power. And that no TikTok critique can silence a song born of purpose.
In the end, Afua said it best: “We are thinking. We are visionaries.” Indeed. And visionary women don’t compete—they complete a legacy.
Below is the full text of Afua Asantewaa’s Video:
“Sometimes I chant on videos, discussing me, and all that like this, I don’t want to use the word stupid, because I’m a lady. Sometimes I want to respond to some of these comments, and that’s why I don’t want to mention her name here, because I feel like I’m going to give her the platform that she’s hungrily seeking. You get it? And for such a lady who is busy looking for a career on TikTok, to call my husband and I fraudsters. A girl like that, me obaa, I don’t usually do this. I mean, women are supposed to support women. Women don’t drag women down.
Sometimes when I want to go hard on some of these people, of course I have mature, sensible people around me who go like, if you’re getting yourself into this, that’s what you’re looking for. They wish they have, yeah, that’s it. But sometimes it gets here, and I’m like, but you know what? It’s okay. She’s hungry. She’s looking for a career on TikTok. So I’m going to make, not just her, I mean, there are a couple of people whose current life achievements, if we are to draw a bar chart, cannot be created to my achievements.
If… in front of a camera, and if I see this girl, she has nothing to her name. You’re a woman, you support women and all that. That’s what people say. But while she’s dragging my husband, they will not go there and tell her that she’s fooling. Enough of this shit. I’m dying. She wakes up in the morning and be shouting on TikTok.
Why can’t she chase clouds with her own life story? All those people who have been talking ill about people, put their story-line on there. Let’s compare both. Stupid girl.
A woman hating on another woman. Calling me a fucker. If you want to come at me, come at me. Leave my husband out of the picture. Because I don’t think you’ve been able to keep a relationship. You don’t even know how it feels like to be married. And let me tell you today that you will never find the happiness that I have ever had in my marriage till now.
I’ll be nine years in marriage come July. You can’t even keep a relationship with your big mouth and your big nose. I’ve not done this before, but I’m going to do this today. Don’t ask for it. I’m giving you the last chance. If you want to use your life savings to be battling for your life in court, don’t ever mention my name and that of my husband in your career-chasing life on TikTok.
I am not that witch. If you want to be a clout-chasing channel, be that. If you want to talk about me, talk about facts. If you think whatever I am doing is true, with your low-level intelligence, think it’s a fraudulent act. Try it, let’s see. Be the woman that I am and try it, let’s see. Grow up, girl. It’s a new generation. We are thinking, we are visionaries. We are not clout-chasing.”
@ghanaregions Afua Asantewaa vs Priscy. Priscy talking about Afua Asantewaa and her husband. #foryou #GhanaRegions #MultiDebrichGroup #AfuaAsantewaaSingathon ♬ original sound – Ghana Regions
Afua Asantewaa Profile: The Voice That Dared to Break Records
Afua Asantewaa Aduonum, a Ghanaian media personality, journalist, entrepreneur, and vocalist, etched her name into the hearts of many when she undertook the Guinness World Record attempt for the longest singing marathon in December 2023. Though her attempt was not ultimately certified by Guinness, her resilience, national pride, and musical endurance transformed her into a symbol of Ghanaian determination and unity.
With a career built around advocacy, entertainment, and cultural preservation, Afua was never just singing—she was telling the story of Ghana, one melody at a time. But fame, especially for women, comes with scrutiny. And Afua’s star soon attracted shadows. TikTok personality Priscy accused her of using the sing-a-thon as a business ploy, branding her and her husband as fraudsters.
Afua’s recent response—deeply emotional and unapologetically raw—highlighted the emotional toll of public life, especially when personal relationships are dragged into viral narratives. “Women are supposed to support women,” she stated, “not drag each other down.” Her words resonated not just as a defense, but as a manifesto for every woman navigating the knife-edge of visibility and vulnerability.
QueenLet Profile: Gospel’s Silent Storm and Record-Breaking Visionary
While the dust of controversy circles Afua’s attempt, another Ghanaian woman is quietly tuning her voice for history. QueenLet, born Leticia Kyerewaa, is a prophetic gospel minister, entrepreneur, and award-winning vocalist whose spiritual and sonic influence continues to grow.
Recently crowned Sing-A-Thon Artist of the Year 2024 at the Ghana General Awards – GH AWARDS.
QueenLet is poised to submit her own Guinness World Record sing-a-thon for consideration. Her performances blend worship with a genre she pioneered—“soakat,” a fusion of soaking worship and prophetic ministration. Her upcoming record attempt is rooted not in competition, but in calling. QueenLet is a multilingual.
What sets QueenLet apart is her intentional silence amid the noise. She does not sing to trend—she sings to transform. As Afua’s public battles unfold, QueenLet’s preparation is a reminder that purpose, when aligned with patience and prayer, creates a platform that needs no defense.
Priscy Profile: TikTok’s New Breed of Critic or Clout-Chaser?
Priscy, a Ghanaian TikTok content creator, has become infamous in recent weeks for her scathing commentary about Afua Asantewaa’s sing-a-thon. Labeling the effort as a fraud, she accused Afua of leveraging the event for personal business gains. Her words didn’t just stir the pot—they boiled it.
But who is Priscy? With no significant public accolades to her name yet, she represents a growing group of online creators who leverage controversy as content. Her criticisms, though presented as opinion, have sparked debates about the ethics of online commentary, especially when it crosses into defamation.
While criticism is a cornerstone of democratic dialogue, the tone and intent matter. Priscy’s approach—attacking Afua’s integrity and dragging her husband into the mix—exposes a darker side of social media where chasing clout often trumps constructive critique. Afua’s refusal to dignify the accusations with full naming may have been a power move in itself: don’t feed the algorithm with someone else’s hunger.
A Larger Conversation: Women, Legacy, and Digital Culture
What Afua Asantewaa and QueenLet represent is bigger than music—it’s a legacy of Ghanaian women who are using their voices to chart history. Whether through secular or spiritual songs, they echo a continent’s heartbeat. But their journeys also reflect the challenges that women face when they rise: instant scrutiny, baseless accusations, and the weaponization of social media.
Priscy’s voice, though amplified by algorithms, reminds us of a responsibility that comes with platforms: to critique with care, to question with facts, and above all, to uplift, not tear down.
A Stage for All, But Not All Performances Are Equal
Afua Asantewaa’s response, QueenLet’s poised rise, and Priscy’s sharp words form a modern Ghanaian parable. A tale of voice, vision, and validation. As QueenLet prepares for her global submission and Afua continues to evolve beyond the shadows of controversy, one truth remains:
Greatness is not built on going viral. It’s built on values.
And in that regard, the world will remember the songs of Afua and QueenLet far longer than it will the noise of TikTok.