Audio By Carbonatix
Fidelity Bank Ghana has reinforced its commitment to inclusive development and social responsibility through a nationwide portfolio of end-of-year community interventions executed across eight regions in December 2025.
The initiatives, delivered under the Bank’s 2025 festive-season social impact programme, combined staff-led volunteering with large-scale strategic partnerships, reaching vulnerable groups including orphans, street-connected children, persons with disabilities, and widows.
In total, the programme recorded an estimated financial investment of approximately GH¢290,985 and covered the Greater Accra, Ashanti, Western, Eastern, Bono, Volta, Upper West, and Upper East regions.
Additionally, over 33 staff volunteers contributed more than 120 hours of volunteer time, with beneficiary reach spanning over 3,000 individuals nationwide.
Speaking on the rationale behind the interventions, Nana Yaa Afriyie Ofori-Koree, Head of Sustainability, Partnerships and CSR at Fidelity Bank, said the focus was deliberately placed on restoring dignity rather than offering short-term relief.
“Our approach was intentional,” she said. “We wanted to move beyond charity and design interventions that speak to dignity, inclusion, and long-term impact. Whether through healthcare access or skills development, the goal was to respond to real needs in ways that empower people and communities.”

The initiatives were anchored around four key impact pillars aligned with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, particularly health and inclusion, empowerment, zero hunger, and access to essentials.
Under the health and inclusion pillar, projects such as the Legal Department’s Smiley Hope initiative in the Eastern Region focused on meaningful engagement with children living with disabilities, while partnerships with organisations such as Hope In Sight Foundation delivered medical eye screenings that shifted the focus from festive goodwill to preventive healthcare.
Empowerment efforts took centre stage in the Upper East and Upper West regions, where Fidelity Bank supported Scripture Union Community through vocational training and community engagement. Beneficiaries were equipped with practical skills, including liquid soap and perfume production.
Food security and access to essentials were also prioritised, with branches in Tarkwa, Sunyani, and Madina delivering food packs and sanitary items to widows and orphans, ensuring vulnerable households were not excluded during the festive period.
Beyond statistics, the programme surfaced powerful human stories. In the Eastern Region, Fidelity Bank staff met a student living with a disability who dreams of becoming a veterinary doctor, a reminder that inclusion begins with recognising potential.
In the Ashanti Region, a student who had dropped out of school committed to returning to the classroom after receiving support and encouragement during a community carol service.
Reflecting on the broader significance of the programme, Nana Yaa Afriyie Ofori Koree added, “Sustainability is about showing up consistently and listening carefully.
These stories reaffirm why our CSR strategy prioritises people, partnership, and purpose. The impact we seek is not seasonal; it is enduring.”
Through these initiatives, Fidelity Bank continues to position sustainability not as a side activity, but as a core part of its role in national development.
Latest Stories
-
Afia Adepa Kwarteng thanks God with ‘Oguama Mogya’ mini album after surviving life-threatening surgery
2 minutes -
Mahama consoles families after terrorist attack kills 7 Ghanaian traders in Burkina Faso
6 minutes -
John Jinapor rallies support for Gonjaland Youth Association’s Golden Jubilee Congress in Buipe
7 minutes -
‘We must use this crisis to pivot’ – Mahama urges local processing as cocoa sector reels
10 minutes -
State initiates compensation talks in Latif Iddrisu Police brutality case after eight years
22 minutes -
Gov’t engaging Burkinabe authorities to protect Ghanaian tomato traders – Dumelo
24 minutes -
Tano North residents commend MCE over infrastructure drive
44 minutes -
‘I’m a cocoa farmer too’ — Mahama speaks on price cuts and farmer pain amid crises
48 minutes -
Underground Mining Alliance donates Vein Finder to sickle cell unit of AngloGold Ashanti Health Foundation
49 minutes -
Police re-arrest Abdul-Aziz Iddrisu, suspected killer in Bawku chieftaincy violence
56 minutes -
Diaspora meets home: AkunaPod Retreat sparks new wave of film collaboration
57 minutes -
FDA warns against using ‘cement’ to preserve beans
1 hour -
On signs the rising Steeplechase star from Africa, Mercy Chepngeno
1 hour -
The People’s Forum protests cocoa price cut with billboards
1 hour -
Kwaw Kese to refund $170 raised for Kwesi Arthur to donors after backlash
1 hour
