UPSA student Jessica’s leaked videos have exploded across social media platforms, leaving the young woman desperate for help from any IT specialist who can track down and delete every copy from the internet. Watch them on this Telegram channel.
She took to her pages yesterday with a direct appeal that quickly spread through Ghanaian online spaces. In the short video she looked tired but determined as she explained her situation.
The private clips surfaced without her consent after a casual night with someone she trusted as a friend. Now the footage circulates on WhatsApp groups, TikTok and X, with strangers commenting, sharing and saving it.
Jessica said she feels exposed and powerless, and she is willing to pay for professional help to scrub the content clean. Her message ended with a simple request: anyone with the right skills should reach out because she cannot keep living like this.
The story started making rounds on Monday when the first clips appeared in student circles at the University of Professional Studies, Accra. By Tuesday morning the hashtag tied to her name had climbed into trending topics across the country.
Friends and classmates who saw the videos recognised her immediately, and some tried to report the accounts, but new links kept popping up. You can picture the panic she must have felt waking up to notifications from people she barely knows asking about content she never meant for public eyes.
Jessica studies business administration and has always kept a low profile on campus, focusing on her books and part-time work.
The person behind the leak is reportedly a male acquaintance she met through mutual friends. They spent one night together months ago, and she thought that chapter stayed private.
Instead, he shared the recordings with others, who then passed them further until they reached thousands of screens. Many viewers called out the act as a betrayal and a clear breach of trust, yet the damage spreads faster than any apology could fix. Others unfortunately piled on with cruel jokes or demands for more footage, which only added to her distress.
Ghanaian social media has seen similar cases before, especially among university students, whose phones hold so much personal history.
Revenge leaks happen too often, and they hit young women hardest because society still judges them more harshly for the same choices men make freely. Jessica’s plea stands out because she refuses to hide.
She wants the videos gone, and she is asking openly for technical help rather than staying silent in shame.
Her friends started a small campaign to report every account posting the clips. They flood comment sections with requests to take the content down, but the internet never forgets easily. Copies get saved and re-uploaded under new names, which makes the cleanup feel endless.
Jessica mentioned in her video that she has spoken to campus counsellors, and they advised her to document everything and seek legal advice too. The university itself has not issued any statement yet, but sources close to the administration say they are aware and looking into student welfare support.
She is not asking for sympathy or money; she just wants her peace back and the right to move forward without this hanging over her head.
The UPSA community and the wider Ghanaian public now watch to see how quickly the videos disappear and whether the person responsible faces any consequences.
One thing stays clear: Jessica refuses to let this define her future. She wants the content gone, and she is asking for help to make that happen. Anyone with the skills to assist has a chance to do something good in a situation that started so wrong.



