Press Releases of Thursday, 12 February 2026

Source: Telecel Ghana

'Equip women and youth with skills for Africa’s free-trade market' - Telecel Ghana CEO

Osu Mantse, Teteete Nii Nortey Owuo IV, joins the panel of business leaders and diplomats on stage Osu Mantse, Teteete Nii Nortey Owuo IV, joins the panel of business leaders and diplomats on stage

Chief Executive Officer of Telecel Ghana, Ing. Patricia Obo-Nai has called for deliberate investment in practical digital skills and awareness of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to ensure women and young people in business can benefit meaningfully.

Speaking on the Women Prosperity Dialogue opening panel at the Africa Prosperity Dialogues (APD) 2026 in Accra, under the theme ‘Building an Inclusive AfCFTA,’ Ing. Obo-Nai said that trade can only deliver shared prosperity if more women and young people are equipped to participate.

She noted that many women and young traders still lack a clear understanding of how AfCFTA works and how it can support cross-border trade.

“The AfCFTA Protocol on Women and Youth clearly shifts the trade agreement from just opening markets to preparing people to benefit from those markets. But awareness remains a major challenge because many women and young traders don’t yet understand how AfCFTA works or how it can support their businesses.”

Ing. Obo-Nai urged national governments and key players to tackle limitations to maximising the full potential of AfCFTA including navigating multiple SIM rules, mobile money limits, data regulations and compliance requirements, among others.

Looking into the future, Ing. Obo-Nai stressed the need to prepare the next generation of African producers and innovators.

She cited the Telecel DigiTech Academy, which introduces practical coding, robotics and design skills at the primary school level, as well as Telecel’s partnership with the government’s One Million Coders Programme.

The partnership is set to train 100,000 young people, with a deliberate goal of achieving at least 70 percent female participation.

“If AfCFTA is going to have generational impact, we must think beyond today. How are we preparing the younger generation to take advantage of the opportunities today? At Telecel, we are intentionally investing in early-stage skills development for the young ones who are coming up. I think the private sector should be deliberate about where we are investing our efforts to build the future we want to see.”

Ing. Obo-Nai said digital literacy and financial skills have become essential trade tools, particularly for women operating in the informal sector.

She highlighted the work of the Telecel Foundation, which provides digital and financial skills training to women in underserved communities, with a focus on the agribusiness value chain.

Sharing the example of the Telecel Women in Business proposition which provides access to finance, connectivity, reach and visibility for women-led business, Ing. Obo-Nai tasked the private sector to design solutions that meet women and young traders where they are.

She urged policymakers to embed trade, digital and financial education into national AfCFTA strategies, adding that inclusion of women and youth should be treated as a core requirement rather than an afterthought.

The session followed a special opening address by Vice-President of Ghana, Her Excellency Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang, who called on African governments to rethink how borders are managed to promote trade, mobility and shared prosperity.

She described AfCFTA as an opportunity for Africa to move from dependency and fragmentation toward self-reliance and integration.

Other members of the high-level panel, including former African Union Deputy Chairperson Monique Nsanzabaganwa, Africa Business Council President Dr. Amany Asfour, Ghana’s Former Ambassador to Brazil H.E. Prof Abena Busia Professor Emerita, and Dr. Joy Kategekwa of the African Development Bank Group, agreed that addressing barriers to skills, finance and market access is critical to making Africa’s single market equitable and participatory.

The Africa Prosperity Dialogues 2026, held at the Accra International Conference Centre, brought together policymakers, business leaders and development partners to advance practical solutions for empowering SMEs, women and youth within Africa’s emerging single market.

Telecel Ghana CEO, Ing. Patricia Obo-Nai speaks on the opening panel of the Africa Prosperity Dialogue.