The dream of a pastor of the Jesus Foundation Prayer Ministry at Tema
Community One, Albert Tetteh Mensah, to marry his pregnant fiancée
Wednesday ended in near fisticuffs at the Tema Metropolitan Marriage
Registry.
A 20-year-old ex-girlfriend of Pastor Mensah’s, who claimed to have
bore him a two-week-old baby, rudely interrupted the ceremony, which
was initially scheduled for 9 a.m., only for officials of the Social
Welfare Department to intervene and reach an agreement with the parties
involved.
Scores of would-be couples who had queued for their turn to exchange
vows looked on in perplexity as family members of Ms Mabel Patamia, the
nursing mother, sang and cursed the pastor and his family members who
had followed him to the registry to tie the nuptial knots.
Patamia’s mother, Madam Cynthia Patamia, could not come to terms with
the events, following what she described as Pastor Mensah's initial
proposal to the family to ask for her daughter’s hand in marriage.
"I'm surprised he could have a change of heart and make a U-turn two
weeks after the delivery of his baby boy by my daughter," Madam Patamia
bewailed.
The chaotic scene created resulted in scores of traders, passers-by and
residents grouping to catch a glimpse of the spectacle, while Madam
Patamia’s livid family members engaged the security detail at the
assembly in a stand-off.
That necessitated a call for reinforcement, which saw armed policemen
and some members of the Tema Development Corporation (TDC) task force
being positioned at vantage points to ward off troublemakers.
Infuriated for being locked out from entering the registry, Madam
Patamia and her family members cursed and rained insults on the security
men, as well as persons believed to be supporting the marriage.
It took the intervention of the Tema Metropolitan Chief Executive (MCE), Mr Issac Odamtten, to restore calm.
Madam Patamia told the Daily Graphic that her daughter had, over the
past couple of years, been suffering from a recurring medical condition
for which the family was unable to find a cure, after several hospital
visitations.
"It was during one of our usual searches for a cure for her that we
came across Pastor Mensah who promised to heal her, since the condition
was spiritual," she said.
She emphasised that the pastor later requested that Mabel be made to
move into the mission house, so that he could dedicate more time to
praying for her.
"We agreed to his suggestion because at that time he had a wife who
also resided in the mission house and we never anticipated he could,
along the line, exploit Mabel sexually," Madam Patamia pointed out.
She indicated that later the pastor sent away his wife and subsequently
started having sexual relations with Mabel on her (mother’s) blind
side.
"When the issue came to our notice and we confronted him, he denied and
suggested that his interest was to groom Mabel and marry her. She was
then six months’ pregnant, but it was not noticeable due to her slender
figure," she indicated.
She said later when the family realised that Mabel’s illness still persisted, they asked her to return home.
"It was on her return that we noticed some changes in her, and when we
queried her, she confessed to being pregnant for Pastor Mensah, who had
even had an ultra-scan carried out on her to determine the growth and
gender of the foetus," she explained.
Madam Patamia explained that the family, armed with the information
provided by Mabel, extended an invitation to Pastor Mensah, who admitted
responsibility for the pregnancy and was fined GH¢1,000 after he had
told the family that he intended to marry Mabel.
Pastor Mensah, she said, failed to pay the fine and also shirked his
parental responsibilities during the pregnancy and after the birth of
the baby.
"We fought him fiercely before he even attended a naming ceremony for the child a week ago," she pointed out.
The Registrar of the marriage registry, Mr Emmanuel Avenorgbor,
however, told the Daily Graphic that the caveat posed by Madam Patamia
and her daughter could not be allowed to hold because there was no legal
marriage contract binding the pastor and Mabel.
"It is for this reason it was decided that the marriage be allowed to
go on, while the Social Welfare negotiates for child maintenance claims
for the young lady,” he said.
He indicated that Pastor Mensah, during a closed-door meeting, had
accepted everything Madam Patamia had alleged in her complaint.
"At the two-hour closed-door meeting with Pastor Mensah and Madam
Patamia’s family, it was agreed that a compromise be reached for the
marriage to hold, since the pastor did not perform any customary rites
on Mabel to warrant the cancellation of the marriage.
"Child maintenance issues were raised and we have decided to provide
legal remedy for the young lady should the Pastor fail his obligations,”
Mr Avenorgbor told the Daily Graphic.
He, however, said it had been decided that the marriage certificate be
withheld until the Social Welfare Department investigated and resolved
all differences between Pastor Mensah and Ms Patamia.
That, he explained, also included the welfare and upkeep of the newborn baby.
An obviously embarrassed Pastor Mensah, who admitted to the Daily
Graphic that he had initially proposed to marry Mabel, said he was
surprised by the action taken by the family to denigrate him.
"I'm totally devastated and cannot come to terms with events. I'm not
in the right frame of mind to grant you further interviews on this
issue," he stated.
Source: Graphic.com.gh

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