In the aftermath of the High Court in Accra dismissing her case against former Chief Finance Officer Ernest Kwasi Nimako, Deborah Seyram Adablah is still speaking as she has taken to her social media pages to address her critics defiantly.
In the video she shared online, she confidently asserted that insults hurled at her had no impact, challenging her detractors to continue, emphasizing that words could not silence her.
Amidst laughter, Adablah declared that the only effective way to silence her would be to slap her mouth shut with money.
She set a price tag on her silence, throwing out figures like Ghc10,000 or Ghc100,000, seemingly unfazed by the recent court ruling and the accompanying cost of GH¢10,000 levied against her.
“What’s amusing,” she remarked, “is how some claim I’m a nobody, yet they spend their money on data just to talk about me.”
Addressing the irony of her perceived insignificance, she questioned the priorities of those investing time and resources into discussing her life.
The proud ‘Side Chick’ also revealed that her social media pages are managed by a team of three individuals, indicating she often remains shielded from the barrage of insults directed her way.
Watch the video below:
Background
The High Court in Accra has dismissed the case filed by Deborah Seyram Adablah, the young woman who has sued a former Chief Finance officer of a bank claiming sexual harassment.
In a ruling on Nov 28, 2023, the Court presided over by Justice John Bosco Nabarese held that although the relationship between the two was immoral and was not in conformity to acceptance of society, there was no reasonable cause of action arising from the writ filed by Adablah.
The court said the foundation of the relationship was one that the Court should not be invited to give judicial stamps to adding: “You cannot recover the price of something you have committed into an immoral act”.
The plaintiff has been slapped with a cost of GH¢10, 000.
The ruling comes after the former Chief Finance Officer of the bank filed an application urging the court to strike the case of Adablah.