Give Credit Where It Is Due: A Plus Deserves Recognition for Gomoa’s Breakthrough Moment
In the wake of the recent Gomoa Easter festivities, your article suggests the need to convert visibility into long-term development ... read full comment
Give Credit Where It Is Due: A Plus Deserves Recognition for Gomoa’s Breakthrough Moment
In the wake of the recent Gomoa Easter festivities, your article suggests the need to convert visibility into long-term development. While that conversation is valid and necessary, it is equally important—if not more so—to acknowledge the individual who created that visibility in the first place.
Kwame Asare Obeng, widely known as A Plus, did not merely contribute to a conversation—he created the platform that made the conversation possible. Your article sidesteps his role, and that omission is neither fair nor accurate.
The Gomoa Easter Carnival was not accidental. It was the result of deliberate planning, coordination, and execution. It brought thousands of people into the area, energized local commerce, and placed Gomoa on the national map in a way that had not been achieved before. Vendors sold, businesses thrived, and the community experienced a meaningful surge in economic and social activity.
That is not theory. That is measurable impact.
What is concerning, however, is the tendency to analyze outcomes while ignoring the architect behind them. It is easy to sit behind a screen and speak in abstractions about “development” and “long-term planning.” It is far more difficult to mobilize resources, align stakeholders, and successfully execute a large-scale initiative that benefits an entire constituency.
A Plus did exactly that.
Leadership should not only be measured by policy proposals but by execution. The carnival demonstrated initiative, creativity, and a willingness to rethink how local economies can be stimulated. These are the very qualities that drive real, sustainable development.
Rather than downplaying or overlooking his contribution, this moment should serve as a call to action for other leaders within Gomoa and beyond. The benchmark has been set. What is required now is collaboration—not criticism. If stakeholders build on this foundation, the visibility generated can indeed translate into infrastructure, investment, tourism growth, and long-term economic expansion.
But let’s be clear: none of that happens without the first move.
And that first move was made.
A Plus deserves acknowledgment. He deserves encouragement. And above all, he deserves credit.
Because before there can be “development,” someone must first create the opportunity.
He did.
Pelicles. 27 minutes ago
What is "Easter Festivities"? Go and ask the Kwahu people the meaning of Easter festivities without any long-term developmental planning. Unwanted pregnancies come with such festivities and is A-Plus ready to cater for those ... read full comment
What is "Easter Festivities"? Go and ask the Kwahu people the meaning of Easter festivities without any long-term developmental planning. Unwanted pregnancies come with such festivities and is A-Plus ready to cater for those children whose fathers just came to Gomoa to have fun?
Give Credit Where It Is Due: A Plus Deserves Recognition for Gomoa’s Breakthrough Moment
In the wake of the recent Gomoa Easter festivities, your article suggests the need to convert visibility into long-term development ...
read full comment
What is "Easter Festivities"? Go and ask the Kwahu people the meaning of Easter festivities without any long-term developmental planning. Unwanted pregnancies come with such festivities and is A-Plus ready to cater for those ...
read full comment