Vodafone Discriminate Against Ghanaian Artistes

Mobile Telecommunication Giant, Vodafone, left a sour taste in the mouth of some journalists when it openly discriminated against Ghanaian artistes billed to perform at the 020 Live Concert alongside International acts Trey Songz and �Kokomaster� D�banj from Nigeria. Vodafone deliberately treated Ghanaian local stars as though they were nobody and worshiped the foreign artistes like thin gods. At the pre-event launch on Tuesday September 20, 2011, at the Golden Tulip Hotel ahead of tonight�s big show, Vodafone officials clearly exhibited their disregard for Ghanaian musicians. The sitting arrangement at Golden Tulip�s Upper Terrace said it all, with the three foreign stars -Trey Songz, Dbanj, Amber Rose- and a Vodafone official fully decorated and branded with Vodafone colours. The four sat on confortable red seats, with a 020 backdrop limited to just the four of them and a red carpet just for the four of them. The Ghanaian hip-life stars; VIP and 5Five, sat on ordinary seats, bare background (no Vodafone branding or decoration whatsoever) and no carpet for them. When Peacefmonline.com�s Entertainment Reporter, Eugene Osafo-Nkansah asked for some explanation (If was any), as to why the organizers decided to make such an �arrangement� during the Q and A section, Vodafone�s Chief Marketing Officer, Uche Ofodile, (who was one of the four enjoying the red carpet treatment), curtly dismissed the question. �I don�t understand your question� I don�t know, I don�t really understand what you are talking about,� she said. Eddy Blay, who was the MC at the press conference, asked Ms. Uche if Eugene can be allowed to re-phrase the question, but a clearly riled Uche Ofodile insisted that they should �forget about Eugene and move on�.