By Prince Ahenkorah
Hanypay Ghana Ltd., has formally inaugurated its Board of Directors in a major step aimed at strengthening corporate governance, regulatory compliance, and its leadership position within Ghana’s fintech and digital asset space.
The ceremony, which marked an important milestone in the company’s institutional development, was officiated by Her Ladyship Justice Patricia Quansah of the High Court, who was nominated by the Acting Chief Justice of the Republic of Ghana.
Her presence highlighted the growing emphasis on accountability, legal compliance, and sound governance within the emerging digital financial services sector.
The event attracted a wide range of stakeholders, including representatives from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Ghana, regulatory bodies, financial institutions, legal professionals, academia, development partners, traditional authorities, corporate entities, and the media.
Following the inauguration, the newly constituted Board held its first sitting and elected its leadership. Mr. Daniel Glover was selected as Board Chairman, Ms. Grace Kafui Vormawor as Vice Chairperson, and Gershon Ntsri, Esq. as Board Secretary.
The full Board comprises eleven members drawn from diverse professional backgrounds, including academia, law, finance, technology, governance, and business leadership.
Members include Prof. Hugh Aryee, Dr. Esther Asiedu, Dr. Makafui R. Agboyi, Dr. Joshua Doe, Mr. Stephen Opon, Rev. Flora Lamptey, Mr. Godson Sena Adjavor, and Mr. Hudson Emmanuel Opoku-Mensah.
The inauguration comes at a time when Hanypay is actively participating in the Securities and Exchange Commission Ghana Regulatory Sandbox Programme, positioning the company within the country’s emerging framework for regulated fintech and virtual asset innovation.
Speaking at the ceremony, Founder and Group CEO, Prof. Hugh Aryee, expressed gratitude to the SEC Ghana for admitting the company into the sandbox, describing it as evidence of the Commission’s commitment to supporting responsible innovation, investor protection, and the growth of the digital financial sector.
He noted that Hanypay’s innovation strategy is anchored on transparency, accountability, regulatory compliance, and responsible technological advancement.
Prof. Aryee outlined several key innovations being developed within the sandbox environment, including a utility payment settlement system powered by a digital token ecosystem, secure peer-to-peer and business-to-business transaction platforms, digital wallet services for merchants and corporates, fintech interoperability solutions, and Hanymarket, a digital marketplace designed to facilitate trade across Africa.
According to the company, Hanymarket aims to support commerce across the continent, with the AKL utility token serving as a key medium for transactions to promote financial inclusion and cross-border trade.
He further stressed that governance and compliance remain central to the company’s long-term growth strategy, particularly as it expands within the virtual asset and digital finance ecosystem.
The newly constituted Board, he said, brings together expertise across multiple disciplines and is expected to provide strategic oversight in areas such as regulatory compliance, risk management, corporate governance, financial sustainability, cybersecurity, partnerships, and consumer protection.
Hanypay reaffirmed its commitment to maintaining high standards of integrity, accountability, and regulatory compliance as it continues to build a scalable digital financial ecosystem.
The company operates as a fintech and digital commerce platform offering services in payment infrastructure, digital wallets, utility payments, fintech interoperability, and marketplace solutions, with a focus on financial inclusion and digital trade across Africa and beyond.
