
Entrepreneur Richard Nii Armah Quaye unveiled a nationwide food bank project on August 1, 2025, targeting hunger and dignity restoration in vulnerable communities.
The RNAQ Foundation initiative, launched at Accra’s La Palm Royal Beach Hotel, will provide free daily meals across Korle-Gonno, Kasoa, Ashaiman, Odorkor, and Madina. Quaye, recalling his own struggles, declared: “This isn’t just about feeding people; it’s about telling every Ghanaian they matter.”
Meals will be sourced from local vendors to simultaneously support small businesses and ensure nutritional quality. The project drew praise from officials including National Youth Authority CEO Osman Abdulai Ayariga, who called it “timely” for its generational impact, and Deputy Food Minister John Dumelo, who applauded Quaye’s use of wealth for public good—joking he’d “use [his] Ghana Card” for a meal.
Quaye, who stepped down from leadership roles at Quick Angels and Bills MicroCredit this year, now focuses solely on empowerment. Citing Maslow’s hierarchy, he vowed: “As long as I have strength, we’ll keep expanding this project.”