On Sunday, May 3, Côte d’Ivoire’s official government website published an interview with Stéphane Kounandi Coulibaly, Director of Innovation, Startups and the Private Sector at the Ministry of Digital Transition. In the interview, he outlined the country’s ambition to become a regional innovation hub. Yet significant challenges remain, particularly in cybersecurity. In that context, We Are Tech Africa spoke with Babel Balsomi (pictured), an ethical hacker, AI researcher and CEO of Hiero Digital, to examine some of the key issues.
We Are Tech Africa: Ivorian authorities have stepped up their cybersecurity ambitions with the creation of the National Agency for Information Systems Security (ANSSI) and the launch of a Security Operations Center (SOC). On the ground, do these ambitions match the scale of the vulnerabilities being observed?
Babel Balsomi: The creation of ANSSI is a real structural step forward. Bringing the National Computer Security Incident Response Center (CI-CERT), the Cybercrime Fighting Platform (PLCC), and the Directorate of IT and Digital Forensics (DITT) under a single authority helps address the fragmentation that had weakened the government's ability to respond quickly to incidents. The political will is clearly there, and that matters.
But there is still a major gap between these institutional ambitions and the reality experienced by businesses and ordinary users. The situation on the ground looks very different.
WAT: How would you assess the cybersecurity posture of SMEs in Côte d’Ivoire today — in terms of infrastructure, practices and awareness among business leaders?
BB: Starting with infrastructure, a large share of the systems supporting Côte d’Ivoire’s digital economy — corporate networks, servers and network equipment — is outdated. During audits at SMEs, including accounting firms, logistics companies and private clinics, I still regularly find servers running Windows Server 2008 or 2012, even though Microsoft stopped supporting those systems years ago.
Yet these machines remain connected to the internet and continue handling client data, including financial information, often without properly configured firewalls, network segmentation or isolated backups. Expanding digital services on top of that kind of infrastructure simply increases the attack surface without improving security.
A large share of the systems supporting Côte d’Ivoire’s digital economy — corporate networks, servers and network equipment — is outdated.
As for practices and awareness, the lack of cybersecurity culture is often profound, but not deliberate. I frequently meet business owners who discover during our first discussion that cybersecurity is a field in its own right. Yet these companies process payments through mobile money platforms, store customer data and form the backbone of the Ivorian economy. They are real targets — they just do not realize it yet.
WAT: In large companies, why is cybersecurity still struggling to become a strategic priority at the executive level?
BB: In large companies, the problem is different from what we see in SMEs. Operational teams are often aware of the risks, but that awareness usually runs into the same obstacle at management level: cybersecurity is still treated as a cost rather than a strategic issue.
I have seen technical teams identify critical vulnerabilities, produce detailed remediation plans, and then watch those plans get pushed aside because executives considered them non-essential. In some cases, incidents followed a few months later.
A lot of infrastructure today is effectively surviving on luck. Some companies have exposed systems accessible from outside networks with inadequate protection.
WAT: Beyond technical weaknesses, what human and organizational barriers are slowing cybersecurity progress in Côte d’Ivoire?
BB: The first is internal protectionism. Some teams see outside expertise as a threat and resist initiatives that could improve security because they fear losing influence or exposing internal weaknesses.
The second is the lack of continuous training. Cybersecurity evolves constantly, yet many teams are not investing enough in keeping their skills up to date. Over time, they lose touch with how threats are changing.
The third barrier is the failure to integrate young talent. There are highly capable and motivated cybersecurity professionals in Côte d’Ivoire, but organizations still struggle to recruit and retain them. The problem is not necessarily deliberate exclusion. Hiring structures, salary policies and management culture are simply not designed to attract these profiles.
We developed the Cybermétéo — a bulletin designed to assess a company’s vulnerabilities and identify leaked data — precisely to provide organizations with an objective view of their security posture. One in three companies refuses the exercise. Not because of cost, since it is free and confidential, but because many organizations still see transparency about vulnerabilities as a threat in itself. That says a lot about the gap between institutional ambition and operational reality.
WAT: You often speak about the lack of a cybersecurity culture within organizations. How can employee behavior become a major vulnerability?
BB: Beyond budgets and infrastructure, cybersecurity is also a cultural issue. It is still not seen as a shared responsibility.
An employee clicking on a phishing link, coworkers sharing passwords, or confidential documents being sent through personal messaging apps — these are the kinds of everyday behaviors that create openings for attackers.
I have conducted phishing simulations in Ivorian companies where between 70% and 80% of employees clicked on malicious links. That is not a question of intelligence. It is a question of awareness and exposure to the right information.
An employee clicking on a phishing link, coworkers sharing passwords, or confidential documents being sent through personal messaging apps — these are the kinds of everyday behaviors that create openings for attackers.
This kind of culture has to be built over time through training, leadership and clear internal policies. Right now, it remains largely absent.
WAT: Ordinary citizens are also increasingly exposed. Why do you describe connected users as the weakest link in the digital chain?
BB: More and more people are using fintech services every day as mobile adoption expands rapidly across the country. But most users are operating without any real protection.
WhatsApp scams, fake giveaways, identity theft on social media and fraudulent applications collecting personal data affect thousands of people every day. Most users simply do not have the tools or instincts needed to detect these threats.
Today, ordinary citizens are the most exposed and least protected part of the chain. At a time when mobile payments are becoming mainstream, public services are moving online and health and identity data are being collected at scale, the lack of cybersecurity awareness among users is no longer a secondary issue. It is a systemic risk.
WAT: Before artificial intelligence even enters the picture, what are the most common and effective cyberattacks targeting organizations in Côte d’Ivoire today?
BB: The threat landscape can broadly be divided into three levels, each reflecting a different degree of inadequate preparedness.
The first is phishing, and it is causing serious damage. Large companies, mid-sized firms and SMEs are targeted daily by phishing campaigns. What makes these attacks successful is not necessarily technical sophistication, but the absence of basic cybersecurity habits.
It can be a fake Treasury Department email requesting updated banking information, a WhatsApp message impersonating a CEO to request an urgent transfer, a fraudulent link imitating the CNPS portal or a local bank, or a fake telecom invoice with altered banking details. These situations occur every week.
In the simulations I have conducted, click rates on malicious links regularly exceed 70% to 80% of employees tested. In Europe, those figures would trigger serious concern. Here, they are often treated as normal.
Many companies have no business continuity plans, no reliable backups and no incident response contracts.
The second category is Business Email Compromise, or BEC, and these incidents are becoming increasingly common. A company receives what appears to be a legitimate email from a supplier announcing new banking details, and the accounting department sends money to a fraudulent account.
This technique has existed for more than a decade and does not rely on advanced technology. It works because many organizations still lack basic verification procedures, dual approval systems for transfers and sufficient staff awareness. This is not primarily a technology problem. It is a culture problem.
There is also the issue of data encryption. I have audited private clinics where patient records were stored on unencrypted local drives with no offsite backup, on Wi-Fi networks shared by doctors, administrative staff and visitors.
The third category is ransomware. Given the weaknesses we have discussed, even relatively simple ransomware attacks could paralyze a large number of organizations. Many companies have no business continuity plans, no reliable backups and no incident response contracts.
Hospitals, corporations and critical infrastructure operators in Europe and the United States have already been crippled by ransomware attacks for weeks at a time. Organizations in Côte d’Ivoire face the same threats with far fewer resources to respond and recover.
WAT: Is Côte d’Ivoire prepared for the new threats associated with artificial intelligence?
BB: No. And the threats linked to AI are fundamentally different.
One of the first risks is prompt injection. AI agents are autonomous systems capable of carrying out tasks with limited human intervention — accessing databases, sending emails, interacting with third-party systems and making certain decisions.
A prompt injection attack works by inserting malicious instructions into the data processed by the AI system, whether through a document, a form or an email. The objective is to hijack the system and make it perform unauthorized actions without operators realizing it.
For example, if a government agency deploys an AI agent to process citizen requests, a compromised form could instruct that system to quietly exfiltrate entire databases. The danger lies in the same qualities that make AI agents useful: autonomy, speed and operational capacity.
The danger lies in the same qualities that make AI agents useful: autonomy, speed and operational capacity.
The second category is training data poisoning. If an AI model is trained on compromised data, its outputs and decisions can gradually become distorted without anyone immediately detecting the manipulation. The model continues operating normally, but its reasoning has been compromised at the source. Since Côte d’Ivoire aims to develop models adapted to local realities, this risk is particularly important.
The third category involves mutating AI-driven attacks and prompt flux. Today, attackers can use large language models to generate hundreds of malware variants automatically. Each version differs slightly from the previous one, allowing it to evade antivirus systems based on known signatures. It works like a fast-mutating virus that changes more quickly than defenses can adapt.
Prompt flux pushes this even further. Malicious instructions change continuously and unpredictably in real time, making conventional filtering systems far less effective because every attack appears differently. These attacks can also destabilize AI models themselves and turn them into attack surfaces.
What is important to understand is that even the most advanced countries are still struggling to defend against these threats. Standards are still evolving, tools remain under development and expertise is limited.
If a prompt flux attack targeted a bank, telecom operator or government agency in Côte d’Ivoire today, the consequences could be severe. Many organizations still lack reliable backups, incident response teams, behavioral detection systems and crisis management procedures. In some cases, there is also deep distrust toward external cybersecurity experts. The result is that systems could remain compromised long before anyone realizes what happened.
Africa has the chance to avoid some of the mistakes made elsewhere, where digital ecosystems were built without integrating security from the beginning. But this opportunity will not remain open indefinitely.
The talent needed to build these capabilities exists in Côte d’Ivoire. I see it during cybersecurity competitions and within technical communities. But organizations still struggle to integrate and retain these profiles. That represents a direct loss for national resilience.
WAT: The country wants to deploy AI in sectors such as healthcare, agriculture and education. Can these initiatives scale safely without stronger digital foundations?
BB: Let me be very clear: deploying artificial intelligence across Africa is a historic opportunity, and the continent needs to move now, not in five years.
Africa has the chance to avoid some of the mistakes made elsewhere, where digital ecosystems were built without integrating security from the beginning. But this opportunity will not remain open indefinitely. Global technology firms, investors and regional competitors are already moving quickly.
So the real issue is not choosing between AI and cybersecurity. The challenge is advancing both simultaneously. Right now, however, that is not what I see in practice.
Take the example of AI systems used in public hospitals to manage patient records or assist with diagnosis. These systems must connect to hospital networks, databases and multiple staff workstations.
Yet in many environments, I still find unsegmented networks where doctors, administrative staff and visitors share the same infrastructure, login credentials shared between users, and sensitive data left unencrypted both during transmission and storage.
In that environment, AI does not simply increase the value of the system. It also increases its exposure to attacks.
An attacker who compromises such a system could block access to medical records during an emergency, alter patient data or steal information belonging to thousands of people. Similar attacks have already severely disrupted hospitals in France, the United Kingdom and the United States. Africa will not remain immune indefinitely.
Karen Diallo said it clearly during the Cyber Africa Forum: many organizations still do not see the need to invest in digital security until it is too late.
An AI system that is secure by design can be deployed faster and adopted more broadly because users trust it. Conversely, a major incident involving an insecure system could damage confidence for years among users, investors and institutional partners.
The Safe AI Label was launched with positive intentions, but it still raises a key question: what technical standards actually support it? A label without independent audits, enforceable requirements or penalties for non-compliance is not a security guarantee. At this stage, it is mainly a statement of intent.
I am not arguing against AI deployment. Quite the opposite. Security should be treated as a condition for acceleration, not as an obstacle.
An AI system that is secure by design can be deployed faster and adopted more broadly because users trust it. Conversely, a major incident involving an insecure system could damage confidence for years among users, investors and institutional partners.
My position is straightforward: no AI deployment in critical sectors such as healthcare, agriculture or education should move forward without a mandatory pre-deployment security audit. That is not a conservative approach. It is the minimum requirement for turning this technological opportunity into a lasting advantage rather than a large-scale vulnerability.
WAT: Beyond the broader discourse around digital transformation in Africa, what message would you like to send to decision-makers in Côte d’Ivoire and across the continent?
BB: The message is simple: digital transformation cannot succeed sustainably if security is treated as an afterthought.
Digitization without cybersecurity is like building a city without doors or locks. The larger the system becomes, the more vulnerable it grows.
The ambitions outlined by the Ministry of Digital Transition are real. Expanding the startup ecosystem, deploying AI in public services and positioning Côte d’Ivoire as a regional technology hub are important goals that deserve support.
But cybersecurity is still too often absent from these discussions. That omission matters because it reveals a structural blind spot. Governments are digitizing services, connecting agencies and opening public contracts to startups without building the security mechanisms needed to protect the ecosystem at the same pace.
Every digital service launched without adequate security measures creates a new vulnerability. Every database assembled without encryption increases the risk of future breaches. Every connected agency without proper network segmentation becomes a possible entry point into wider government systems.
The consequences are already visible. Startups in Côte d’Ivoire increasingly have access to public contracts, which is positive. But many of these companies still lack strong cybersecurity practices while handling sensitive government data and connecting directly to state information systems.
Every digital service launched without adequate security measures creates a new vulnerability. Every database assembled without encryption increases the risk of future breaches. Every connected agency without proper network segmentation becomes a possible entry point into wider government systems.
That creates opportunities for supply chain attacks, where attackers compromise smaller or less protected organizations to gain indirect access to larger targets. I have already documented this type of pattern in Côte d’Ivoire.
Digital transformation creates value, but it also increases systemic dependencies. If those connections are not secured, they become systemic vulnerabilities.
There is also an important human dimension that remains underestimated. Internal rivalries, resistance to change and managers reluctant to integrate younger talent continue slowing both cybersecurity progress and digital transformation more broadly.
These factors are holding the country back at a time when both digital transformation and cyber threats are accelerating simultaneously.
What decision-makers need to do is involve private-sector actors, SMEs and operational experts directly in the design of digital transformation strategies — not just cybersecurity strategies.
These are the people confronting vulnerabilities every day. They understand where systems fail, where digitized processes generate unexpected risks and where local talent can strengthen resilience.
Digital transformation has to be built with the people living these realities on the ground.
Interview by Adoni Conrad Quenum
African governments are expanding unified digital platforms to centralize public services and improve administrative efficiency
Countries including Senegal, Rwanda, Kenya, Benin and Burkina Faso have launched or expanded online portals for government services
Despite progress, many countries still face challenges linked to weak infrastructure, fragmented systems and cybersecurity risks
Unified public service platforms are gaining ground across Africa as governments accelerate efforts to digitize administrative services and centralize them on single online portals. Inspired by e-government models developed in Europe, Asia and the Middle East, several countries are seeking to make public services easier to access, reduce administrative delays and improve efficiency as internet adoption expands rapidly across the continent.
Recent initiatives illustrate the trend
Burkina Faso recently launched a centralized digital public services platform aimed at progressively bringing together a wide range of online government services. The platform already provides 1,672 information sheets and 95 online procedures, while connecting 183 public institutions.
Senegal is also stepping up the rollout of digital public services through its “New Deal Technologique” strategy, which seeks to connect more government agencies and simplify access to online services. The country launched its unified public services portal, known as “e-Senegal,” in March.
Rwanda remains one of Africa’s most advanced digital administration models through its Irembo platform, which gives users access to several hundred government services, including civil status documents, permit applications and public payments.
Other African countries have also expanded similar initiatives in recent years. Kenya developed the eCitizen portal, which has become one of the country’s main gateways for online government services. In Benin, authorities have strengthened the national public services portal, allowing citizens to complete some procedures online related to administrative documents and tax services. The government says more than 10.5 million digital documents were issued in 2025 and that 75% of public services are now available online.
Uneven progress across the continent
The acceleration reflects broader efforts by African governments to modernize public administration and improve service delivery. According to the United Nations’ 2024 E-Government Survey, Africa’s E-Government Development Index rose from 0.4054 in 2022 to 0.4247 in 2024, an increase of 4.8%. The continent recorded the world’s second-fastest improvement after Asia.
Despite that progress, major disparities remain between countries. Rwanda, South Africa, Mauritius and Morocco rank among Africa’s most advanced digital administrations, supported by sustained investment in digital infrastructure and online public services. Many other countries continue to lag in the digitization and integration of government services.
Cameroon, for example, still faces significant fragmentation across public platforms, with many procedures remaining largely manual despite several digital transformation programs launched in recent years. Chad, the Central African Republic and South Sudan continue to struggle with weak telecommunications infrastructure, limited internet connectivity and low administrative capacity. In some countries, existing platforms remain underused because agencies are not fully interconnected or because internal government procedures have not been sufficiently digitized.
Security and trust become central issues
Unified digital platforms now serve purposes that go beyond administrative modernization. Governments increasingly view them as tools to improve tax collection, strengthen transparency, reduce certain forms of administrative corruption and simplify interactions between public authorities, citizens and businesses.
At the same time, data protection and platform reliability have become growing concerns as governments manage expanding volumes of sensitive information linked to identity systems, taxation and social services. African states are under increasing pressure to strengthen cybersecurity capabilities and protect public platforms against fraud, hacking and personal data breaches.
Samira Njoya
Morocco is expanding online public services by introducing new digital procedures linked to its electronic national identity card
Citizens will be able to complete much of the ID renewal process online, including applications, document uploads, and electronic payments
Authorities also plan to launch a mobile digital ID app as part of broader efforts to modernize and secure public services
Morocco is accelerating the modernization of its public administration with the rollout of new online procedures linked to the electronic national identity card (CNIE). The General Directorate of National Security (DGSN) announced the upcoming launch of several digital services during an open house event held from May 18 to May 22 in Rabat. The agency said the measures are aimed at simplifying administrative procedures and easing pressure on registration centers.
The main reform concerns the renewal of the electronic identity card. Citizens whose CNIE is nearing expiration will be able to complete much of the process online through the DGSN’s digital platforms, including the Epolice.ma portal and the cnie.ma website. Users will be able to pre-fill applications, upload certain supporting documents, track residency certificate requests, and pay stamp duties electronically before a final in-person appointment for biometric verification.
Moroccan authorities say the initiative forms part of the country’s broader strategy to digitize public services. Divisional Commissioner Loubna Kikou, quoted by state news agency MAP, said the reform is designed to reduce unnecessary travel for citizens and shorten processing times, particularly during peak periods such as the summer holidays.
The project also includes the planned launch of a digital version of the identity card through the “Mon e-ID” mobile application. The application will allow citizens to store a secure digital copy of their identity document on their smartphones, including devices without NFC technology. The DGSN said it has also strengthened cybersecurity measures to protect personal data and secure online administrative transactions.
The initiative is part of a wider drive to digitize Morocco’s public administration in recent years. The country has expanded digital platforms across several sectors, including justice, taxation, civil registry services, and business administration. Morocco is among Africa’s leading countries in e-government. According to the United Nations’ “E-Government Survey,” the country recorded an e-government development index (EGDI) score of 0.6841 in 2024, ranking 90th globally and among the continent’s most advanced digital administrations.
Authorities are also seeking to keep pace with rising digital adoption. According to the National Telecommunications Regulatory Agency (ANRT), Morocco had 39.9 million internet subscriptions at the end of March 2025, representing a penetration rate of more than 108%, according to a report published in June 2025. With internet use continuing to expand, the digitization of identity procedures is viewed as a strategic step toward streamlining interactions between citizens and public services while strengthening the security of online government services.
Samira Njoya
Tunisian entrepreneur Sana Boubaker co-founded Slayton, an AI-powered omnichannel customer relationship management platform targeting African businesses and public institutions.
Slayton centralises calls, emails, WhatsApp messages and social media interactions into a single interface to improve customer management efficiency.
The platform uses artificial intelligence to automate repetitive tasks, generate suggested responses and route requests to appropriate departments.
Tunisian entrepreneur Sana Boubaker has positioned herself at the centre of that transition as co-founder and chief executive of Slayton, a start-up specialising in customer relationship management solutions.
Through its platform, the company provides an omnichannel solution tailored specifically to African businesses, government administrations and institutions.
Slayton launched the platform to modernise interaction management by centralising communication channels into a single interface. The system integrates phone calls, emails, WhatsApp messages and social media conversations.
The approach gives teams a 360-degree customer view through a complete interaction history, enabling smoother follow-up and reducing information loss. To improve operational performance, Slayton integrated artificial intelligence into its platform.
The technology automates repetitive tasks, generates suggested responses, summarises conversations and classifies requests before directing them to the appropriate departments. As a result, the platform aims to maximise team productivity while streamlining customer service operations.
Alongside her entrepreneurial activities, Sana Boubaker also works with French company Roundesk, which develops telecommunications and customer relationship management solutions. Roundesk recruited her in 2021 as customer relations manager. She subsequently rose through the company’s ranks to become chief operating officer.
Sana Boubaker built her career on a background in economics, finance and customer relations. She graduated from the Institut supérieur de gestion de Tunis in 2016 with a degree in economics and international finance.
Two years later, she earned a research master’s degree in banking, finance and strategy from the École supérieure de commerce de Tunis. She began her professional career in 2017 as a customer assistant at ISE Holdings, a financial services company. Between 2018 and 2021, she worked as a sales adviser for French insurance company Filiassur.
This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba
Adapted in English by Ange J.A de Berry Quenum
Moroccan entrepreneur Hicham Benyebdri co-founded hospitality technology start-up Userguest in 2018 to help hotels increase direct bookings.
Userguest provides advertising campaign management and website personalisation tools designed to reduce hotels’ dependence on third-party booking platforms.
Benyebdri previously worked at Expedia and co-founded digital agency Swell Hotel Marketing before launching Userguest.
Moroccan entrepreneur Hicham Benyebdri has positioned himself in that market through Userguest, a hospitality technology start-up that he co-founded in 2018 alongside Ahmed Chami and Assil Bernossi. The company helps hotels increase direct bookings through their own websites.
Userguest developed a platform designed to help hotels attract more travellers to their websites and reduce dependence on third-party booking platforms. The company focuses on two key challenges for hotel operators: attracting visitors with booking intent and converting those visitors into customers.
The company’s first solution centres on managing advertising campaigns for hotels. Userguest handles the creation, launch and optimisation of campaigns across multiple digital platforms. The approach aims to help hotels reach travellers who are more likely to book directly through official hotel websites.
The company’s second solution focuses on improving the online experience of hotel website visitors. Userguest displays personalised messages based on users’ behaviour or preferences. For example, the platform can highlight specific offers or encourage visitors to complete immediate bookings.
Hicham Benyebdri launched other ventures before founding Userguest. In 2015, he co-founded Swell Hotel Marketing, a digital agency dedicated exclusively to the hospitality industry. He served as the company’s chief executive until 2019. Benyebdri graduated from Université du Québec à Montréal in 2007 with a bachelor’s degree in commerce and administration.
He also earned a master’s degree in international marketing from London South Bank University in 2010. He began his private-sector career in 2011 as a paid media analyst at Greenlight, a British agency later acquired by Brave Bison. Between 2012 and 2015, he worked as partner marketing manager at U.S. travel company Expedia.
This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba
Adapted in English by Ange J.A de Berry Quenum
Egyptian proptech startup Byit announced last week its expansion into the United Arab Emirates. Its AI-powered platform helps independent brokers match homebuyers with available properties. The expansion aims to connect Egyptian developers with Gulf investors. The company, which says it already has 40,000 brokers on its platform, is also planning to launch in Saudi Arabia soon.
Fintech company M-KOPA said on Wednesday it had extended more than 1.2 billion cedis (about $82 million) in credit to over 550,000 customers since launching operations in Ghana in 2021. Using a flexible daily payment model, the company enables low-income users to acquire smartphones and access the internet. For the first time, the devices also include health insurance. M-KOPA said the initiative has helped more than half of beneficiaries increase their income and improve their quality of life.
Nigerian fintech company Moniepoint will host a demo day on Tuesday, May 26, 2026, to conclude the second edition of its intensive coding bootcamp. Over nine weeks, young African developers were trained to build professional software applications while receiving a stipend. The best projects will be presented during the event, giving participants exposure to potential employers.
Yango Group has launched its enterprise-focused technology division, Yango Tech, in several African markets. The company, which already operates mobility and delivery services in Africa, now wants to position itself in the market for enterprise, smart city and public-sector technology solutions. Yango Tech will offer services centered on artificial intelligence, digital infrastructure and organizational digital transformation.
Yango Tech aims to support African companies and institutions in automating operations and modernizing digital systems across sectors including healthcare, transportation, commerce, finance and public services.
The company’s offering includes generative AI platforms, intelligent data-management tools, urban mobility solutions and strategic advisory services focused on AI governance and executive training. In addition, the group wants to help organizations assess the return on investment of AI projects and accelerate the deployment of large-scale digital services.
The expansion comes as digital adoption gains momentum across Africa. According to McKinsey & Company, generative artificial intelligence could generate up to $103 billion in economic value annually across the continent. Meanwhile, the GSMA estimates that Africa’s mobile economy could contribute as much as $270 billion to continental GDP by 2030, driven by the growth of digital services, cloud computing and AI-based technologies.
Yango Tech already relies on pilot projects launched outside Africa, particularly in intelligent emergency-service management and real-time ambulance tracking systems in Central Asia.
In Africa, the group has started initial deployments in Mozambique and South Africa before gradually expanding into other strategic African markets. Consequently, the company joins a growing list of international technology firms seeking to establish positions in Africa’s emerging AI sector, where demand for automation, data analytics and digital infrastructure continues to accelerate rapidly.
Moreover, Yango Tech’s expansion reflects intensifying competition in Africa’s AI and digital infrastructure markets. Although the continent still faces deficits in connectivity, computing capacity and specialized skills, companies and public administrations continue to increase demand for automation and data-analysis solutions. This momentum continues to attract international players seeking exposure to a fast-growing but still underpenetrated market.
Samira Njoya
South African entrepreneur serves as chief executive officer of MILLI, a crowdfunding platform he co-founded in 2023 alongside his professor, Peter Konhäusner.
MILLI allows individuals, communities and organizations to launch fundraising campaigns within minutes through a simplified three-step process. Users first tell their story, then define a financial target and finally illustrate the project with images.
Once campaigns go live, users can share them through email, messaging applications and social media platforms to increase visibility. In addition, the platform enables users to monitor contributions in real time and transfer funds directly into bank accounts.
Unlike traditional crowdfunding platforms that deduct a percentage from each donation, MILLI applies a single flat fee of 1,000 South African rand, or about $60, regardless of the amount raised. The company says this model allows project owners to retain nearly all collected funds.
Beyond the financial model, the startup seeks to strengthen national solidarity by relying on an active donor community willing to support social, humanitarian and community-development causes.
“We do not simply host campaigns, we actively contribute to funding them through our audience and partners,” Dario Eugenio told Disrupt Africa. “The platform revolves around storytelling, video and social-media sharing, enabling users to create compelling campaigns and distribute them effectively. Our core belief remains simple: better stories generate more funding.”
To improve accessibility, MILLI also operates through mobile applications on iOS and Android devices. The application allows users to manage fundraising campaigns directly from smartphones, monitor donations, receive instant notifications and communicate with supporters.
Dario Eugenio holds a multidisciplinary academic profile. He graduated from the University of Pretoria in 2020 with a bachelor’s degree in psychology and international relations. He completed a second bachelor’s degree in psychology in 2021 at the South African College of Applied Psychology.
He also earned a master’s degree in leadership for digital transformation in 2023 from the GISMA University of Applied Sciences.
This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba
Adapted in English by Ange J.A de Berry Quenum
PayPal announced on Wednesday, May 20, that it had expanded its PayPal USD stablecoin, known as PYUSD, to 70 markets worldwide, including several African countries. The U.S. digital payments company wants to enable individuals and businesses to conduct faster and lower-cost international transfers through the dollar-backed digital currency.
PYUSD will become directly accessible through eligible users’ PayPal accounts. Users will be able to buy, hold, send and receive stablecoins, while also transferring funds to third-party digital wallets or converting balances into local currencies.
For businesses, PayPal primarily highlighted faster cross-border settlements, with transaction times reduced to minutes instead of several days through traditional banking channels.
“Offering PYUSD in Africa delivers tangible value to the people and businesses driving growth across these dynamic markets. Individuals gain a flexible and stable way to transfer funds faster, while businesses can streamline cross-border payments, improve settlement times and create new growth opportunities,” said Otto Williams, senior vice president and managing director for the Middle East and Africa at PayPal.
The initiative comes as digital payments and cross-border transfers continue to grow rapidly across Africa. According to the World Bank, Sub-Saharan Africa remains the world’s most expensive region for remittances, with average transfer costs exceeding 7% for sending $200.
Consequently, stablecoins continue to attract growing interest from fintech companies and payment providers, which increasingly view blockchain-based assets as alternatives to traditional financial rails that many users consider slow and expensive.
The international expansion of PYUSD also reflects intensifying competition in the market for dollar-backed digital currencies. Since launching the stablecoin in the United States in 2023, PayPal has sought to expand PYUSD usage across e-commerce, international transfers and digital financial services.
According to specialized platform Odaily, global stablecoin supply recently reached a new record above $323 billion, driven largely by growing adoption in digital payments and digital assets across emerging markets.
This article was initially published in French by Samira Njoya
Adapted in English by Ange J.A de Berr Quenum
Ivory Coast plans to strengthen the digitalization of its agriculture sector. Agriculture, Rural Development and Food Production Minister Bruno Nabagné Koné met a delegation from Huawei Côte d’Ivoire in Abidjan on Tuesday, May 19.
Acting Managing Director Benoît Wu led the delegation. The discussions focused on the “Smart Agriculture” project, which Huawei launched in 2023 during the International Exhibition of Agriculture and Animal Resources (SARA). The initiative aims to modernize farming practices through digital technologies.
Digitalisation de l'agriculture : le Ministre Bruno Koné échange avec Huawei Côte d'Ivoire
— MINADRPV (@minadrpv) May 19, 2026
Le Ministre de l'Agriculture, @Bruno_N_Kone, a reçu ce mardi 19 mai, à son cabinet, une délégation de Huawei Côte d'Ivoire, conduite par son directeur général par intérim, M. Benoît Wu.… pic.twitter.com/YzcW9JAl3o
The project notably includes the deployment of a digital platform capable of mapping agricultural plots, monitoring crop development and providing farmers with data on inputs, yields and weather conditions. Authorities believe these tools could improve agricultural productivity, strengthen farm monitoring and support producers’ decision-making in response to climate-related risks.
Moreover, Minister Bruno Koné gave preliminary approval to support the initiative, which he described as a strategic lever for accelerating the modernization of Ivory Coast’s agricultural sector. The government also wants to establish closer cooperation with Huawei Côte d’Ivoire to support the operational rollout of the project across the country.
The initiative comes as several African countries accelerate the digitalization of agriculture to improve yields and strengthen sector resilience. In Ivory Coast, the world’s largest cocoa producer and a leading cashew producer, traceability and agricultural data collection have become increasingly important. New environmental requirements imposed by international markets, particularly the European Union, continue to drive this trend. Several plantation geolocation and digital supply-chain monitoring programs already operate within the cocoa sector.
Beyond farm modernization, Ivorian authorities also want to use digital technologies to strengthen food security, improve farmers’ access to agricultural information and support the structural transformation of the sector. The government now considers digital technology a key tool for improving the competitiveness of Ivorian agriculture and attracting additional investment into agricultural value chains.
This article was initially published in French by Samira Njoya
Adapted in English by Ange J.A de Berry Quenum
South African entrepreneur Tshaamano Mabuba founded and currently leads Buddy Learning, an edtech startup focused on academic support services and access to education.
Founded in 2022, the company develops learning solutions for students, parents, schools and businesses. The startup aims to simplify education and expand skills-development opportunities for a broad range of users.
Buddy Learning designed its platform as a comprehensive educational ecosystem. The platform offers educational resources adapted to all academic levels, from kindergarten to university.
The company structures content through an intuitive interface that allows families to identify tools matching each stage of the educational journey quickly.
One of the platform’s core features connects families with qualified tutors known as “Buddies.” The mentoring service targets students who struggle academically as well as those seeking to improve performance. In addition, the platform allows parents to select tutors that best match their children’s academic needs.
To address financial, linguistic and technological barriers, Buddy Learning also developed BuddyAI, an educational assistant integrated directly into WhatsApp.
The tool allows students to ask questions, receive explanations and complete interactive exercises directly from mobile phones. Consequently, the company seeks to expand educational access among users with limited digital resources.
Alongside her entrepreneurial activities, Tshaamano Mabuba also works as a television presenter for SuperSport Schools, a media company focused on producing and broadcasting school sports content.
Tshaamano Mabuba graduated from the University of Cape Town with a bachelor’s degree in actuarial science in 2022. She also earned a bachelor’s degree in data science and business analytics in 2025 from the University of London.
Her professional background reflects a multidisciplinary profile. She started her career in 2019 as an administrative assistant at Super Group, a logistics and mobility company.
More recently, between January 2025 and March 2026, she taught mathematics at the Jeppe High School for Girls, where she applied her analytical expertise to education.
This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba
Adapted in English by Ange J.A de Berry Quenum
Based in Kampala, EduBridge Africa launched in 2019 under the leadership of founder Winnie Chimwedzi. The company wants to improve African students’ access to international universities through a digital platform that centralizes academic guidance, counseling and administrative services.
The platform provides support across several stages of the student journey, including university selection, application preparation, academic orientation and administrative assistance. In addition, the company supports students through visa-related procedures.
EduBridge Africa primarily targets students interested in universities located in Europe, North America and selected Asian countries.
One of the main challenges the startup addresses involves the information asymmetry that still characterizes Africa’s student mobility market. Many applicants continue to face limited access to information regarding available programs, admission procedures and financing opportunities.
At the same time, students often face risks linked to informal intermediaries and document fraud. Consequently, the startup seeks to digitize academic counseling services to improve accessibility and transparency.
EduBridge Africa aims to centralize interactions between students, advisors and partner institutions while reducing administrative complexity. The platform also highlights mentorship and personalized support services designed to prepare candidates for academic integration abroad more effectively.
The growth of companies such as EduBridge Africa reflects the broader rise of African edtech platforms specializing in educational guidance and international mobility.
As demand for overseas higher education increases, several startups across the continent now seek to digitize services that historically remained fragmented and largely offline.
The Ugandan edtech company says it currently supports more than 5,700 enrolled students, works with over 11 active mentors and covers more than 54 countries.
This article was initially published in French by Adoni Conrad Quenum
Adapted in English by Ange J.A de Berry Quenum