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Ghanaian reggae powerhouse Black Prophet has launched a high-stakes revolutionary mission to save a generation of youth from the clutches of opioid addiction.
The music artiste has announced that the proceeds from his upcoming Sankofa Reggae Fest 2026 will be dedicated to building a specialised rehabilitation centre to combat the rising tide of Tramadol abuse in Ghana.
Consequently, he has called for support and partnership to realise the dream of many rehabilitation centres to save addicts ahead of the second edition of the Sankofa Reggae Fest 2026.

The festival, scheduled for 6 March 2026 at the Tawala Beach Resort, is more than a concert; it is a direct intervention in a crisis that Black Prophet says is turning children as young as 13 into "daylight zombies".
The Mission: Healing through the 'Roots'
Black Prophet, who rose from the streets himself, revealed that his motivation stems from witnessing the devastating transformation of Ghanaian neighbourhoods.
He warned that the current drug epidemic, specifically the misuse of the synthetic opioid Tramadol, is a threat to the nation's future security and social fabric.
“I’ve released a song called 'Mr. Importer' because while somebody’s child is struggling with drugs, somebody’s making the money... I wouldn't like to see anyone’s daughter get raped because they are on drugs, and I wouldn't like anybody’s son to stand and sleep in the middle of the traffic,” Black Prophet stated in an interview with MyJoyOnline.
“I was on the street when I was younger, and when I was on the street in those days, there was nothing like tramadol,” he recounted.

“Now, if you walk around certain places in Ghana, young girls like 13, 14, young boys around the same age are on this drug, and it's killing the people. It's turning them into daylight zombies.”
The music artist, who was a visible face in the campaign against HIV in the early 2000s, is funding the initial phase of his anti-tramadol mission from his own "pocket money" but hopes the festival will provide the capital needed for a permanent recovery facility.
“The proceeds that are coming out of this concert are going into building a rehabilitation centre so that we can take these crazy tramadol zombies off the streets,” he added.
Personal mission rooted in street experience
Black Prophet said his anti-drug campaign is deeply personal, drawing from his own upbringing.
“I was on the street when I was younger, and when I was on the street in those days, there was nothing like tramadol,” he said.
He contrasted that era with the current situation, which he described in stark terms.
“Now if you walk around certain places in Ghana, young girls like 13, 14, young boys around the same age are on this drug, and it's killing the people. It's turning them into daylight zombies.”
According to him, the scale of the problem demands national mobilisation.
“How are we going to work together as a people to take this tramadol off the streets? It could be your child, it could be my child, it could be your brother's child, it could be your sister's child.”
Shaik Faisal Ahmed, a music missionary from the UK, encouraged all stakeholders to get involved in rehabilitating young people hooked on hard drugs.
"We have to go on the streets, pick them up and provide them with a safe space towards getting their lives back," he stated.
Sankofa Reggae Fest: The Latin American Edition
The 2026 edition of the festival, themed around the Sankofa philosophy of reclaiming one's roots to build the future, takes on an internationalist flavour this year.
Dubbed the "Latin American Edition", it aims to build solidarity between African and Latin American communities facing similar social struggles.
The international line-up features a diverse array of roots reggae ambassadors :
- Black Prophet & The New Gold Band (Ghana)
- Fidel Nadal (Argentina)
- Natty Congo Crew (Mexico)
- I Jah Bones (Jamaica)
- James Lakay (Haiti/Venezuela)
- Somos Uno (Mexico)
- Kente (Ghana)
- Vibration Kings Band (Ghana)
The festival serves as a cultural platform to restore the relevance of roots reggae on the continent, using conscious music as a weapon against the "negativity" of the drug trade.
The Tramadol Crisis: A Silent Epidemic
The urgency of the Sankofa mission is backed by alarming trends in substance abuse across West Africa.
Tramadol, a prescription-only synthetic opioid, has become a street-drug staple due to its low cost and high availability.
Black Prophet has challenged the government and the public to move beyond apathy and treat the crisis as a shared national burden. He called for stricter legislation to make it "impossible" for minors to access the drug on street tables.
“If you don’t share the riches with the poor, you force the poor to share their poverty with you... If I can come off the street and don’t turn out to be a junkie, then everybody can also do the same thing. Come, let’s celebrate good reggae music while we heal people,” he urged.
The Sankofa Reggae Fest 2026 promises a safe, inclusive environment for cultural advocates and music lovers alike to contribute to a cause that is literally a matter of life and death.
“Let's come together and take these drugs off the street. Let's make it illegal so that you cannot just buy it on a table on the streets,” he urged.
Facts and Figures on the Crisis:
- Targeting the Vulnerable: Usage is highest among youth aged 15 to 25, with reports of children as young as 13 using the drug to cope with poverty or manual labour.
- Potency Levels: While the medical dose is typically 50mg to 100mg, street-grade Tramadol in Ghana often exceeds 200mg to 250mg, leading to instant respiratory distress and seizures.
- Regional Seizures: According to the UNODC, West Africa accounts for over 80% of global Tramadol seizures, highlighting the region's role as a major hub for the illicit trade.
- Zoonotic Danger: Black Prophet describes the "zombie" effect—a state of profound sedation where users remain standing but are mentally unresponsive, making them targets for physical and sexual assault.
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