Asantewaa and AMG Armani are no longer together. The TikTok star, born Martina Dwamena, confirmed the split
herself this week after days of speculation, and the timeline she gave puts the actual breakup at about a
month before she went public.
That detail matters. It means the couple had already quietly ended things before any of the healing videos,
Snapchat posts, or "clout chasing" accusations started making the rounds. Everything the public saw play out
this week was the aftermath, not the moment itself.
The tiktok Video that broke the internet
On Monday, July 13, 2026, Asantewaa posted a TikTok video describing herself as being in her "healing era."
She didn't name Armani directly in that clip, but the caption left little room for guessing: she referred to
"a failed marriage and a failed relationship" as chapters, not her whole story, and named her two children
as her greatest blessing.
That vagueness is what triggered the online chatter. Some followers assumed she was subtweeting a past
relationship. Others accused her of manufacturing drama to promote new music, a familiar accusation levelled
at Ghanaian entertainers whenever a personal post gets unusual reach.
Asantewaa shut that theory down directly on Snapchat, telling a follower plainly that she broke up with
Armani about a month earlier and that people would adjust to the fact with time. She also pushed back on the
idea that a woman with her profile needs manufactured drama for attention, and addressed criticism over
videos where she was seen crying, saying she's human and entitled to her emotions like anyone else.
AMG Armani, real name Godfred Osei Amaku, has made no public statement on the breakup. this is a one-sided
confirmation. Until he speaks, Asantewaa's version is the only account on record.
Who these two are
Asantewaa built her following during the COVID-19 lockdown era and now sits around 4 million followers on
TikTok, making her one of Ghana's most recognisable digital creators. Armani is a musician, songwriter, and
rapper. Public accounts of their relationship trace back to around 2023, reportedly starting after he
invited her to his birthday party. From there they did brand deals together, showed up at public events as a
couple, and had two children.
That level of public visibility is exactly why this breakup travelled so fast. When a relationship has been
monetised and documented for years, the ending becomes public property too, whether the couple wants that or
not.
What this actually says about Ghanaian celebrity culture online
The most telling part of this story isn't the breakup, it's the reflex to assume it's fake. The instant
assumption that a public figure's pain must be a marketing strategy says more about how Ghanaians currently
relate to influencer culture than it does about Asantewaa.
There's a pattern worth naming here: creators who built parasocial, always-online brands lose the benefit of
the doubt when something genuinely hard happens to them. The same visibility that built Asantewaa's audience
is now being used to interrogate her sincerity. That's not unique to her, it's the standard tax on fame in
the TikTok era, and Ghanaian entertainment commentary has been slow to question it rather than just repeat
it.
The unanswered question here isn't "did they break up", that's settled by her own words. It's why the
timeline was kept quiet for a month, and whether Armani's continued silence is a deliberate choice to stay
out of the narrative, or simply him processing it away from cameras. Until he says anything, that half of
the story stays open.
What to watch next
Whether Armani responds publicly at all, and whether Asantewaa's "healing era" framing turns into new content or music that leans on this breakup. Given how her audience is built, a follow-up statement or a new single referencing this chapter wouldn't be surprising. If either happens, that's the next update on this story.