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‘How my parents were ‘k!lled’ in the UK by my jealous aunt’, lady shares sad story of betrayal by family members (video)

Mr. Francis Oppong and his wife

A United Kingdom-based Ghanaian lady is trending online after she shared the pathetic story of the troubles her parents went through in the hands of her mother’s sister, which ultimately led to their demise.

Francis Oppong and his wife died within months of each other after enduring a series of misfortunes allegedly orchestrated by the sister of the wife who hosted the young couple when they migrated from Ghana to the United Kingdom.

In lengthy videos, filled with visual evidence, the daughter of the deceased couple narrated how they migrated from their home country of Ghana to the UK to stay with one of the two sisters of the wife, who lived in London.

“My mother had three sisters. One lived in Ghana, while two lived in the UK. One of the two who lived in the UK sent an invitation to my mother and her husband to come over to the UK for a better life”, the lady narrated.

The young couple, upon migrating to the UK, stayed with the wife’s sister, who invited them and facilitated their trip.

The lady narrated that at some point, the small apartment of her aunt became too small for them all, and the couple decided to move to the house of the second sister of the wife, who at that time did not have a large family.

She narrated that they were living happily until the couple started working and earning their own money.

“That was when jealousy set in. My aunt had told them they could not get jobs with visiting visas, but my father was able to land a cleaning job, using the identity of another relative who was legally in the UK,” she narrated.

She also added that the wife also found a cleaning job using the identity of another relative.

The lady said her aunt became hostile in the house, a situation that forced her parents to intensify efforts to get a place of their own.

The daughter further narrated that fortune smiled on her father, and he landed a more lucrative job as a train driver in London.

Before long, the couple pooled their resources together to purchase a property, which they ultimately moved into.

“When they told my auntie they had put down a deposit for a house, she could not believe her ears and, according to my parents, she looked visibly deflated and dejected instead of being happy for them” she recounted.

The young couple moved into their new home and then felt comfortable raising their own family.

‘I was conceived in the new home and I was about eight months in my mother’s womb when first trouble landed” she recalled sadly.

Policemen suddenly swooped on the new home and arrested the husband and wife for fraud in connection with using fake identities.

The two were sent to different jails, and the house was confiscated.

When the case went to court, Mr. Oppong got a lawyer who was able to access the witness list filed by the prosecution, and to the chagrin of the couple, the number one witness listed on the paper was the wife’s sister.

They were tried and jailed. They were released after spending some time in jail and forfeiting their property.

The young lady further recalled that her mother gave birth to her within a week of her release from jail, but she had no home to go to until a Samaritan helped her to secure emergency accommodation, where her husband joined her when he came out of prison months later, and they started their life all over again.

She further narrated that her father went back to school and came out to start work in the care industry with a decent salary.

They reportedly built their lives back and once again became comfortable enough to help their relatives back home and erect a decent retirement home in Ghana.

She said they were comfortable enough to afford a family vacation to Ghana, but another tragedy struck when the wife was diagnosed with a kidney problem.

She recounted that her mother’s niece volunteered to donate one of her kidneys, and they arranged to fly her into the UK to live with them to facilitate the process.

The lady recalled that all was going well until the niece suddenly absconded from their apartment and could not be traced.

Next, policemen swooped on their apartment again and arrested Mr Oppong, this time for alleged r@pe and human and organ trafficking.

The niece of the wife that the couple accommodated, alleged that Mr. Oppong r@ped her and wanted to use her organs for his wife without her consent.

The case went to trial, and the wife’s sister, who reported them to the authorities the first time, was again seen in court with the niece who accused Mr. Oppong.

After the time-consuming trial, Mr Oppong was discharged and acquitted when he was able to prove that he was not at the locations where the complainant claimed the s3xual violations took place, while hospital records and doctors corroborated that the niece agreed to the kidney donation when she was interviewed during hospital appointments with Mrs Oppong.

The daughter of the deceased said despite the fact that her father was justified, he was never the same again.

He fell into depression because he was suspended from his job and demoted when the accusation was first made, and was not fully restored after he was discharged.

One day, Mr Oppong went to the hospital to pick up his wife from her dialysis session, put her in the car and went to use the toilet.

In the loo, he fell on the ground without anyone noticing. He had died by the time his family traced him to the location hours later.

The heartbroken wife reportedly d!ed within a few months of her husband’s death after suffering double amputation.

The daughter believes her mother’s sister is entirely to be blamed for the misfortunes that sent her parents into their early graves.

She said the children of her aunties failed to commiserate with her and her brother when they lost their mother, even though she noticed that they viewed her WhatsApp status where she announced the passing of her mother.

See the long but gripping videos, which have racked up millions of views on TikTok here.

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