Anas Aremeyaw Anas: my penis became dull and couldn’t have proper sex
Award-winning investigative journalist Anas Aremeyaw Anas has told NEWS-ONE some interesting revelations about his sex life including when his penis became dull and he could not have proper sex for a little over seven days.
Anas said his manhood started malfunctioning after he was administered several injections and tablets at the Accra Psychiatric Hospital when he disguised himself as a lunatic and gained admission to the mental home just so he could do some investigative works there.
Not even a hot spicy romance and a blow-job from his lover could get the penis to perform as it used to and eventually the investigative journalist had to seek medical attention.
“My penis did not actually die because it would not have been able to resurrect. It only became very dull and I got worried it was dead. It could not do what it used to do and having sex was hell but it picked up seriously after that and can create chaos now,” Anas explained.
Anas made the revelation when he showed NEWS-ONE his latest investigative piece, which is a secretly recorded video of an armed Ghanaian soldier who was supervising two civilians to have sex at gunpoint because he wanted to show them where “power lies.”
“The video just reminds me of my experience. It is a serious thing when you want to have sex and you cannot or when you do not want to have sex and someone is forcing you at gunpoint,” he added.
Throwing light on the soldier sex video, Anas said he was still working on the story but would upload the video on his new website, www.nameandshameghana.com, where Ghanaians are encouraged to help fight corruption by videoing evidence of corrupt practices and uploading it there.
Though the site is yet to be launched, all sorts of videos have been sent there including one that shows a group of policemen collecting monies from commercial drivers.
The idea behind nameandshameghana.com is to encourage persons who have some information or evidence of corruption but are not exposing it because they are afraid their cover would be blown, to have a safe way of reporting corruption.
“With this, people can now send emails, audio, video or whatever material they have and be rest assured that no one can trace them. That is the only way we can build a corruption-free Ghana,” Anas explained.
Source: NEWS ONE
Category: News



It is sometimes surprising when you realise some public/civil servants do not show respect to clients that visit their offices. A similar incident happened when I visited Ga South district office specifically at the district office of the Statistical Service. It was shocking how the District Statistician treated enumerators that went for their differences in relation to the amount left for Enumerators and Supervisors after the population and housing census last year September. This is actually what ensued between him Mr Ofori, the District Statistician and me after I got to his office around 2:05pm and he was not around and called him on his cell phone number 0244695403.
Me: Hello Mr Ofori please I am just in front of your office may I know where you are?
Mr. Ofori: why am I not supposed to go for break I am on break.
Me: Okay. When are you likely to return?
Mr. Ofori: I don’t know am I supposed to tell you when I am returning.
Then he hanged up the phone on me. A worker in another office in the district saw us sitting outside and adviced we leave and return the following day since normally when he even leaves before 1pm he doesn’t return how much more leaving the office after 1 pm.
Upon him Mr. Ofori returning to the office about 45mins later asked whether I was the one who called and was disturbing him, I answered in the affirmative and this further annoyed him. He argued with me aimlessly not trying to accept the fact that he was wrong to have spoken to me that way on phone since another Enumerators I met in the district also confirmed that as old as she is he Mr. Ofori spoke to her harshly. He Mr. Ofori the district statistician then concluded I cannot argue that way with him in his office and for that matter will not pay me the difference left. We went on and argue to the extent that I also picked the signed list of Enumerators that have come for their money on his table that if he isn’t prepared to pay me the difference I will not also give it to him. He plus one of his colleague in the office struggle with me and gave it finally to them. He still insisted he is not an accountant for the Statistical Service so I should get to the Head Office for my money. I did not want to do any silly thing in the office again since I was spoken to by some of the staff in the district to exercise some restrain since that is how he has handled some of my colleagues already so it isn’t something new to them and unfortunately not ready to change, I obliged and then left to the my office since I am also a worker of a different entity.
I am trying to put this across for people to see how some Public/Civil Servants treat human beings or fellow Ghanaians when they get to their office fro assistance and I take all the people I spoke to in the district as my witness.