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What Really Happened to Nana Agyei?

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When 18‑year‑old Ghanaian student Nana Agyei left home to pursue his education in Europe, he carried the dreams of a young man determined to build a future far brighter than his beginnings. Today, those dreams have been violently interrupted, and the circumstances surrounding his death remain clouded by contradictions, silence, and a disturbing lack of transparency. 

No parent sends their child to school expecting to receive them back like this.

Latvian authorities reported that Nana fell from a fifth‑floor window, suggesting an accident or possible suicide. But the more details emerge, the more this explanation collapses. Nana had reportedly been bullied for months. Just three days before his death, he was allegedly poisoned — a claim supported by a doctor’s report his family released publicly. He was hospitalised, destabilised, and discharged the same day. Within 24 hours, he was dead.

Tiktok News Reporter Dylan Page have join the call to shed light on what really happened to Nana Agyei

@dylan.page

I hope this helps Nana’s family get some answers 🙏❤️

♬ original sound - Dylan Page

What makes this even more troubling is the information coming from those close to the case. Insider sources allege that Nana may have been beaten and thrown from the building. On the very day he died, the building’s CCTV cameras were reportedly switched off. Months later, the autopsy results have still not been shared with his family. 

More than half of Black students in student accommodation report experiencing racism — yet cases involving their safety often receive little public attention.

These are not small oversights. These are critical failures that obstruct truth, delay justice, and deepen suspicion. Yet despite all of this, the initial narrative leaned toward suicide — a conclusion that those who knew Nana find impossible to reconcile with his ambition, his drive, and his plans for the future.

Foreign Affairs Minister Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa has announced that an investigation has begun into the tragic death of Ghanaian student Nana Agyei Oduru Ahyia.

The Ghanaian Ministry of Foreign Affairs has now stepped in, stating that they take the allegations of possible murder very seriously and will engage Latvian authorities through diplomatic channels. But why did it take months, public pressure, and a grieving family’s persistence for this case to receive the attention it deserves? 

A family sent their son to Europe for an education — not for his body to be returned in silence

A young Black student died under suspicious circumstances in a European country, and instead of immediate transparency, the family has been met with silence, withheld information, and a narrative that does not align with the facts they have presented.

Samuel Okudzeto Foreign Affairs Minister send message to Latvia Authorities

Nana’s death is not just a tragedy — it is a call to action. It raises urgent questions about the treatment of Black students abroad, about institutional indifference, and about the systems that fail families when they need answers most.

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 This case demands public attention, international scrutiny, and a collective insistence on truth. Nana Agyei deserved safety. He deserved protection. He deserved a future. Until the full truth is revealed, the world must not look away.

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