Audio By Carbonatix
Defence Minister Dr. Edward Kofi Omane Boamah has revealed a long-hidden struggle from his childhood—how he nearly missed out on a place at Pope John Senior High School due to what he described as an “admission conspiracy.”
Speaking at the school's 67th Anniversary and Speech & Prize Giving Day on Saturday, Dr. Boamah said his mother fought tirelessly to reverse what appeared to be a plot to swap his place at POJOSS with another applicant.
"Someone tried to take my place. My mother went back and forth between POJOSS and SECTECH three times in one day until she found my results card buried in a box,” he narrated emotionally. “That’s how my journey here began.”

He used the story as a powerful metaphor for perseverance and parental sacrifice, urging students to honour their families by fighting to build dignified lives and serve others.
Dr. Boamah also took the opportunity to share his broader vision for education and youth empowerment, promoting the government’s "One Million Coders" initiative to arm Ghanaian students with digital tools to compete globally.

“The future is not waiting. It’s already here,” he told students, urging them to be agents of change in areas ranging from climate and health to education and governance.
Dr. Boamah also called on alumni to support the school’s infrastructure, and on parents to instil discipline at home, emphasising that POJOSS admissions must be earned, not inherited.
Hope, Service and Digital Future
Dr. Boamah recounted his own journey from Form 1B and Dormitory 3 at House 1 to global stages such as the United Nations and the London School of Economics and credited the school’s discipline and values with shaping his trajectory and underscored the importance of giving back.
"This school shaped my story," he said. "Ahead of this anniversary, we asphalted the school's roads—symbolic of filling the potholes in our adventurous lives."
He challenged students to embrace resilience, innovation, and service, and to honour the sacrifices made by parents and teachers. “Your future is calling. Answer it with courage,” he urged.
Pointing to the "One Million Coders" programme, which he said is a bold initiative to prepare the nation’s youth for the digital economy— Dr. Boamah also encouraged students to see coding, AI, and data literacy not as luxuries, but as survival skills.
“Digital skills are the new passport—not just to travel, but to thrive,” he declared.
Latest Stories
-
MLS bans Yeboah & Jones for betting offences
4 hours -
He called me traitor 50 times – Mourinho sent off after celebrating goal
4 hours -
Eni Aluko wins Joey Barton libel case over X posts
4 hours -
Ten players from Jamaican club denied entry to US
4 hours -
Some banks move to sell assets of PBC over GHC 300 million debt
4 hours -
Uefa fears impact of Premier League spending rules
4 hours -
EU to sign historic defence pact with Ghana in global security pivot
4 hours -
Liverpool lose to Galatasaray in Slot’s 100th game in charge
4 hours -
Iran begins laying mines in Strait of Hormuz, sources say
5 hours -
Joey Barton refused bail after ‘attack at golf club’
5 hours -
GH¢68.7bn gov’t arrears bombshell: Parliament orders probe over suspected fraud
5 hours -
The public display of students’ academic results in basic schools: A case against a damaging practice
5 hours -
GOIL jumps GH¢0.21, MTN Ghana surges past GH¢6.30 in record-breaking GSE session
5 hours -
NAIMOS disrupts illegal mining activities at Gwira Banso-Eshiem
6 hours -
Ashesi hosts Kensei Kai Foundation’s maiden Inter-University Karate Camp
6 hours
