Ecobank Ghana last week held a capacity-building webinar for Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) and Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) across the country.
The forum, which was held via Microsoft Teams brought together over one hundred participants, mainly local organisations to deliberate on various topics related to national development, financial inclusion and general improvement in the livelihoods of individuals and communities.
Organised under the theme; “Leveraging Technology to Enhance Efficiency of NGO Business”, the platform positioned Ecobank as a leading financial services provider, partnering and providing support for the growth and developmental needs of CSOs and NGOs.
In a welcome address, Charlotte Amanquah, Regional Head of Commercial Banking at Ecobank indicated that; Ecobank’s relationship with Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) in Ghana has been a long-standing one, beginning right from the inception of the Bank, in the early 1990s.
She maintained that; “This relationship with NGOs, has deepened over the years and we continuously explore further opportunities for improvement in meaningful ways that inure to our mutual benefit. Today’s forum, therefore, is one of the many initiatives by Ecobank to bring together relevant stakeholders, on a common platform to provide capacity-building for CSOs and NGOs in Ghana”.
Mrs Amanquah concluded that the forum provides the opportunity for Ecobank to discuss its variety of Digital Banking Solutions and the benefits thereof in enhancing business operations and promoting financial inclusion, in support of Government’s agenda towards building a cash-lite economy.
Speaking on the topic; Relevance of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals to NGO’s today and how to make an impact as an NGO, the Special Advisor to the President of Ghana on SDGs, Dr Eugene Owusu, said; The world has now entered a 10-year count-down to achieving the ambitious Sustainable Development Goals, which represent a universal Call to Action to end poverty, protect our planet and bring prosperity and enduring peace to our world and its peoples by 2030.
He further emphasized that SDGs are everybody’s business: – Government, Private sector, civil society, traditional leaders, religious leaders and communities.
Dr Owusu, subsequently, encouraged NGOs to continue to contribute meaningfully to the realization of the three pillars of sustainable development; economic, social and environmental, as there is a clear point of intersection between these SDGs and the fundamental objectives of NGOs, which is to improve the lives and livelihoods of communities within which they operate and to help transform the world.
He commended Ecobank for the interest shown in NGO work, and the focus on […]