At the peak of the economic hardships that Ghana experience in the 70s and early 80s, the late former President of Ghana, Flt. Lt. Jerry John Rawlings, clamped down on people he believed were involved in racketeering of prices of goods.
One of these people was a man named Benjamin Kojo Yemoh, popularly known as Kojo Sardine, described as someone whose family was friends with Rawlings before he seized power.
In a narration of what he knows about his grandfather, as well as others about his father, a grandson of Kojo Sardine described how Rawlings, supposedly threw away the friendship his family shared with him, and jailed his grandfather in an in humane manner.
This grandson also said that it was because his grandfather (Kojo Sardine) had wealth beyond normal Ghanaian standards, particularly during the period of hunger in the country, but quickly added that none of what he had was through illegal means.
“If I’m to believe the many stories, Rawlings was friendly with our family prior to seizing power. Which made the charges against grandpa seem deeply personal and envious. The official charges against B.K Yemoh were for tax evasion and importing yellow corn during the famine. He was beaten, thrown in jail and all his life’s work confiscated illegitimately by this rogue regime terrorizing everyone who they decided was richer than was reasonable by their estimation.
“Sure, my grandad was wealthier beyond normal Ghanaian standards but the source of his wealth was verifiable. That didn’t stop the dictator from brutalizing him, stripping him of all physical dignity, rendering his family homeless and destitute, him eventually dying at the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital of complications from the turmoil of the treatment he had been dealt at the hands of this illegal and merciless regime.