Douala signs a strategic agreement with Huawei to support its digital transformation.
The project targets smart traffic systems, surveillance, and fiber-optic infrastructure expansion.
Authorities plan to digitize 200,000 land records to secure transactions and reduce disputes.
The Douala Metropolitan Area signed a strategic memorandum of understanding with Huawei on April 28 in China. The agreement targets the digital modernization of Douala, the country’s economic capital, which hosts more than 3.5 million residents and faces rising pressure on mobility, land management, and public services.
The partnership remains a framework agreement at this stage. However, it outlines technical support across key areas of urban management. The project includes the deployment of video surveillance systems, the implementation of intelligent traffic management solutions, and the expansion of connectivity infrastructure, particularly the municipal fiber-optic network.
A central component focuses on land management digitization. The municipality plans to digitize around 200,000 land records and introduce a digital certificate of ownership. Authorities aim to secure land transactions and reduce disputes, as land pressure continues to shape urban planning and investment dynamics.
The project also includes smart public lighting systems. These systems enable remote management of infrastructure, reduce energy costs, and improve maintenance efficiency.
In addition, the agreement integrates a skills transfer program. Huawei will train engineers and municipal officials in digital technologies through its training programs.
Authorities have not disclosed financial terms or an implementation timeline. Nevertheless, the agreement reflects a broader strategy by the Communauté urbaine de Douala to modernize urban governance through data and digital technologies.
Huawei has already implemented similar smart city projects across Africa. The company deployed solutions in Nairobi and Mombasa, where authorities integrated surveillance and urban management systems into public security frameworks.
In South Africa, the city of Ekurhuleni adopted the group’s support for digital networks, cloud solutions, and urban management applications. In Senegal, the company is implementing a project in Dakar to digitize road traffic.
These initiatives align with Huawei’s global “Safe City” strategy, which covers more than 100 cities across around 30 countries. The program combines video surveillance, traffic management, and urban data platforms.
Samira Njoya
SOCAPHARM launched “Ivoire Health,” a prepaid card dedicated to pharmacy spending.
The solution allows users to anticipate and manage out-of-pocket medical expenses.
The company combines digital health tools, consulting services, and professional training.
Raymond Bleu-Lainé operates as both a pharmacist and an entrepreneur. He leads the Société Africaine de Consulting Pharmaceutique (SOCAPHARM), a company that specializes in pharmaceutical consulting, training, healthcare, and digital communication.
SOCAPHARM, founded in 2016, develops digital solutions for the healthcare sector. The company designs applications and tools that facilitate access to health services and improve the efficiency of healthcare structures.
Its flagship solution, Ivoire Health, offers a prepaid card dedicated exclusively to pharmacy expenses. The company provides this virtual card to users, who can purchase medicines, pharmaceutical products, or parapharmaceutical goods within a partner pharmacy network without using cash at the point of sale.
Moreover, Ivoire Health positions itself as a health savings solution. Users preload funds onto the card and then use the available balance to pay for pharmacy purchases. This mechanism allows users to anticipate medical expenses and manage a monthly medication budget more effectively.
In parallel, SOCAPHARM expands its operations into two additional areas. First, the company provides consulting services and supports healthcare stakeholders in solving organizational, structural, and development challenges. Second, the company delivers training programs designed for healthcare professionals.
Raymond Bleu-Lainé holds a Doctor of Pharmacy degree, which he obtained in 2009 from the University of Maryland in the United States. He began his professional career in 2011 as a pharmacy manager at Rite Aid, a U.S. pharmacy chain.
Subsequently, he served as an oncology manager at Servier, a France-based international pharmaceutical group, from 2017 to 2020.
This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba
Adapted in English by Ange J.A de Berry Quenum
Complete Farmer connects farmers, buyers, and suppliers through a single digital platform.
The solution addresses fragmentation and inefficiencies in Ghana’s agricultural sector.
The platform improves market access, transparency, and income potential for producers.
Desmond Koney operates as a Ghanaian technology entrepreneur. He co-founded and leads Complete Farmer, an agri-tech company that develops a digital platform connecting all stakeholders in the sector.
Complete Farmer, founded in 2017, positions itself as a single platform that brings together key agricultural actors. The tool connects farmers, agribusiness buyers, and suppliers of equipment and services.
Moreover, the company offers services tailored to each category of user. For farmers, the platform provides tools that organize operations, facilitate access to agricultural inputs, and connect them with reliable buyers. It also improves yields by promoting practices aligned with market requirements.
For buyers, the platform simplifies the sourcing of high-quality agricultural products. Buyers connect with verified producers, track orders, and secure products that meet their specifications, while gaining greater transparency across the process.
For suppliers, the platform acts as a digital marketplace where they offer products and services directly to farmers. As a result, suppliers expand their customer base and increase market reach.
By centralizing these services within a single platform, Complete Farmer addresses the fragmentation that characterizes rural agricultural activities. The solution leverages technology to ensure that farming practices meet international market standards. Consequently, the platform supports higher incomes for producers and consistent quality for buyers.
Desmond Koney earned a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering in 2013 from the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology. He then worked as a teaching assistant at the same institution for two years.
This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba
Adapted in English by Ange J.A de Berry Quenum
Ethiopian startup Gebeya, which developed the Dala Studio platform, has partnered with PROFF IT Group and Miva Open University.
The initiative aims to help entrepreneurs and more than 25,000 Nigerian students move from concept to product development. Using ideation tools and no-code platforms for app and content creation, participants will be able to launch digital businesses.
The cryptocurrency payment platform Breet is launching a $10,000 equity-free grant for African digital finance teams. The initiative targets established projects in payments, stablecoins, and banking infrastructure. Finalists will pitch their solutions at the Africa Technology Expo 2026 before an audience of investors, regulators, and industry leaders.
Applications for the Women in Tech Accelerator program close this Friday, May 8. Tailored for female tech entrepreneurs in Nigeria, this intensive 12-week program offers $10,000 grants, hands-on training, and mentorship designed to help participants scale their businesses from the early stages to sustainable growth.
Zambia-based ZeroAI Technologies develops an education technology solution focused on a largely underserved segment: artificial intelligence and robotics education in low-resource school environments. The company offers turnkey educational laboratories that allow schools to teach STEM subjects — science, technology, engineering and mathematics — even without stable internet connectivity or reliable electricity infrastructure.
Founder Lottie Mukuka launched the startup in 2015. The company designs integrated ecosystems that combine hardware, software and educational content.
“We designed our solution for the schools everyone ignores: those that lack resources, operate in rural areas or do not have infrastructure. (...) Nobody was solving the offline, hardware-focused, full-lab environment problem at a price schools could actually afford,” Mukuka said.
Each deployment includes hardware kits such as Arduino boards and IoT sensors, proprietary offline simulation software, structured educational programs and teacher training modules. The company says the approach aims to help schools become autonomous in teaching artificial intelligence and robotics.
Meanwhile, ZeroAI’s positioning reflects a broader structural challenge across the African education sector. Most education technology platforms rely on stable internet access and digital equipment, which remain unavailable in many African schools. As a result, ZeroAI adopted a hardware-centered and offline-first model specifically designed for rural and under-equipped environments.
Beyond its educational offering, the company also develops broader automation, robotics and digital innovation solutions as part of a strategy that combines training with industrial applications. The startup has already deployed its solution in several countries and trained more than 10,000 students across roughly 40 schools in Africa and other emerging markets.
By addressing access to digital skills at the school level, ZeroAI Technologies reflects a growing trend among African startups that seek not only to digitize education, but also to adapt business models to infrastructure constraints in order to expand practical access to future technologies.
This article was initially published in French by Adoni Conrad Quenum
Adapted in English by Ange J.A de Berry Quenum
South African startup Tivvio launched a digital ticketing solution aimed at independent event organizers in a market largely dominated by platforms designed for large-scale events. The platform offers a self-service ticketing system that allows creators, promoters and community builders to create and manage events within minutes.
Users can generate dedicated event pages, sell tickets and track participants through the platform, which also supports local payment options and fast payout timelines. The Durban-based startup launched in 2026 under the leadership of founder Siyabonga Ngcobo.
“In South Africa, ticketing is purely transactional. Tivvio strives to create a world where the platform itself helps people discover events, connect with other attendees and build an identity around the events they attend,” Ngcobo said.
Unlike traditional ticketing platforms, Tivvio specifically targets small and medium-sized events, many of which operate on a recurring basis and form part of the broader creator economy.
The company says this positioning addresses a gap in the market, where existing tools often fail to meet the flexibility and user experience needs of independent organizers.
“Beyond ticketing, we integrate social features directly into the platform: event feeds, attendee profiles and discovery tools that make attending events a more connected experience. The goal is to make event participation more social, and not just more transactional,” Ngcobo added.
Meanwhile, Tivvio operates a business model based on commissions charged per ticket sold, without fixed fees or subscription costs. The company says the structure lowers entry barriers for organizers, particularly smaller creators and community-led projects. Although Tivvio remains at an early stage of development, the startup currently focuses on expanding its organizer base in South Africa.
The company also plans to expand into additional cities and African markets over time. Furthermore, Tivvio designed the platform to adapt to different local payment systems across markets.
By focusing on the creator economy and adopting a “social-first” strategy, Tivvio reflects a broader shift in the ticketing industry from purely transactional tools toward community-centered platforms capable of capturing new forms of engagement around events.
This article was initially published in French by Adoni Conrad Quenum
Adapted in English by Ange J.A de Berry Quenum
Moroccan entrepreneur Brahim Ennabihi launched Khabiry, a digital platform that connects individuals and businesses with qualified experts across multiple fields. Ennabihi specializes in digital marketing and e-commerce and serves as founder and chief executive officer of the platform.
The name “Khabiry,” which originates from Arabic, means “my expert.” The company says the platform aims to give users on-demand access to specialists tailored to their needs. The services target both individuals and entrepreneurs, who often face business and operational challenges requiring professional guidance.
Launched in 2022, Khabiry provides access to specialists in sectors including law, finance, digital marketing and e-commerce. The platform also brings together experts in real estate investment, business development, innovation and corporate strategy.
Moreover, Khabiry differentiates itself through several features, including access to advice from qualified professionals, personalized support for project development and competitive pricing aimed at helping users better manage costs. In addition, users rate experts on the platform, a system that the company says strengthens transparency and service reliability.
Beyond one-on-one consultations, Khabiry also offers online courses. As a result, the platform has expanded its role beyond advisory services and positioned itself as a learning and skills development tool.
Khabiry says it aims to transform access to expertise by making knowledge more broadly accessible. Ennabihi graduated from Hassan II University in 2021 with a bachelor’s degree in law. Before launching Khabiry, he worked as a search engine optimization specialist at Utorrent Game in Morocco between 2013 and 2021.
This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba
Adapted in English by Ange J.A de Berry Quenum
Ethiopia and Mozambique signed a memorandum of understanding in Addis Ababa on Monday, April 27, to cooperate on digital identity systems and public digital infrastructure development.
The agreement brings together Mozambique’s Digital Transformation and Innovation Agency (ATDI) and FaydaVerse Digital Solutions Enterprise, an Ethiopian public entity responsible for promoting the country’s digital identification expertise internationally. The three-year partnership, which both parties may renew, establishes a technical cooperation framework aimed at developing secure, inclusive and open-standard digital identity systems.
The initiative seeks to allow Mozambican citizens to identify themselves remotely and access public and private services without the need for physical travel. Under the agreement, Ethiopia will provide technical assistance to Mozambique, including technology architecture sharing, local workforce training and pilot project implementation. In addition, both parties plan to strengthen interoperability among government systems and develop tailored cybersecurity solutions.
The partnership also emphasizes technological sovereignty, which has become an increasingly important issue for African governments. The agreement aims to strengthen local control over digital systems and data while reducing dependence on foreign technology providers.
Meanwhile, Mozambique’s decision to partner with Ethiopia reflects the latter’s growing reputation as one of Africa’s most advanced countries in digital identity systems. Over recent years, Ethiopia has expanded its national digital identification program, known as “Fayda,” which aims to assign every citizen a unique and secure digital identity. The system has already registered more than 42 million people and established the foundation for an integrated digital ecosystem.
Authorities designed the platform to operate across public and private services, including social benefits, financial services and online administrative platforms. As a result, Ethiopia has increasingly positioned itself as an emerging model for public digital infrastructure development in Africa.
Beyond its technical dimension, the initiative also highlights the growing role of South-South cooperation in the digital sector. Furthermore, the partnership aligns with the African Union’s Agenda 2063 strategy and reflects broader efforts by African countries to pool expertise, accelerate digital transformation and build a more integrated digital economy across the continent.
This article was initially published in French by Samira Njoya
Adapted in English by Ange J.A de Berry Quenum
South African serial entrepreneur Simangele Mphahlele has developed a digital recruitment platform that connects employers and job seekers while streamlining the hiring process.
Mphahlele co-founded and serves as chief executive officer of eJoobi, a recruitment solution launched in 2016 to simplify how companies hire talent and how candidates access job opportunities.
The platform addresses inefficiencies in traditional recruitment markets. It targets structural barriers, including high job search costs and limited internet access, which many candidates face.
As a result, eJoobi positions itself as an inclusion-focused platform. It aims to broaden access to employment opportunities and reduce friction in hiring processes.
eJoobi offers an end-to-end recruitment system for companies. Employers can publish job vacancies, receive applications, evaluate candidate profiles and select suitable candidates within a single interface.
In addition, the platform provides tracking tools across the recruitment cycle. Employers can monitor each stage of the process, from application receipt to final hiring decisions.
The platform also integrates pre-screening features. Before interviews, recruiters can access key candidate data, including salary expectations and availability. This feature allows employers to filter applications more efficiently and reduce recruitment costs.
Furthermore, eJoobi includes integrated communication tools. Recruiters can interact with candidates through messages, SMS or messaging applications, which accelerates response times and improves engagement throughout the hiring process.
Before launching eJoobi, Mphahlele co-founded eThuta in 2014, an educational support platform designed to improve learning outcomes for students of all ages.
eThuta provides interactive courses, tutoring services and skills development resources tailored to individual learning needs.
Mphahlele earned a bachelor’s degree in applied psychology from the University of South Africa in 2013. She previously worked as an account manager at Microsoft between 2011 and 2012.
This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba
Adapted in English by Ange J.A de Berry Quenum
Rwanda plans to tighten regulations governing minors’ use of social media platforms as African governments increase scrutiny of children’s exposure to digital content and online risks.
ICT and Innovation Minister Paula Ingabire said on Wednesday, April 29, that the government was preparing legislation to prohibit children under the age of 16 from accessing digital platforms. Authorities aim to address growing concerns over online content and its impact on children’s development.
The proposed law would prevent minors from creating accounts or accessing platforms such as Facebook, Instagram and YouTube. Authorities would implement the restrictions through cooperation between internet service providers, digital platforms and parents. The government also plans to rely on a national digital identification system to verify users’ ages.
Ingabire said national data supported the government’s decision. A recent study showed that 46% of schoolchildren already accessed digital services through mobile phones, often without parental supervision.
At the same time, between 30% and 35% of students reported difficulties linked to social media use, including attention disorders and anxiety associated with online content consumption, the minister said.
The initiative builds on Rwanda’s existing online child protection framework rather than introducing a standalone measure. In 2025, the country adopted a national child online protection policy that strengthened oversight of digital content and expanded cooperation with internet providers and digital platforms to curb harmful material.
Rwanda also already enforces cybersecurity and data protection laws that include specific provisions for minors under the age of 16.
African governments tighten digital safeguards
Rwanda’s move reflects a broader regulatory trend across Africa as governments seek to tighten controls on minors’ access to social media platforms.
In Gabon, authorities recently announced regulations that would impose a minimum age of 16 for social media access alongside stronger identity verification measures.
Zimbabwe is also considering similar restrictions targeting users under 18, while Nigeria has launched public consultations on introducing age limits for social media platforms.
Meanwhile, Egypt has started regulatory discussions aimed at strengthening child protection measures against the rise of harmful online content.
These initiatives align with broader coordination efforts led in part by the African Union to improve online safety standards for children across the continent.
Samira Njoya
South African technology entrepreneur Sibongile Maputla founded Squirrel Away in 2025 as a digital platform designed to reshape how families give gifts and build financial security for children.
The platform operates as a value-based gifting solution. Family members and relatives can direct each contribution toward a specific financial objective for a child. The platform aims to gradually build savings that children can later use for education, housing or early adulthood expenses.
Squirrel Away focuses on ease of use. The platform allows users to create an account, add a child or beneficiary and send or receive financial contributions as gifts.
The company designed the service for users without advanced financial skills. The platform also integrates savings into celebrations such as birthdays and family events.
At the same time, Squirrel Away promotes a broader educational and social objective. By transforming gift-giving into an investment activity, the platform encourages children and families to adopt savings habits at an early age and strengthen long-term financial preparedness.
Maputla also serves on the investment committee of the Altvest Credit Opportunities Fund.
She earned a bachelor’s degree in statistics and economics from the University of Pretoria in 2001. She later obtained a master of business administration degree from Wits Business School in 2019.
Maputla started her professional career in 2000 at Standard Bank Group, where she worked as a foreign exchange trading trainee.
In 2002, she joined Coronation Fund Managers as an equity broker. She later served as chief operating officer at Benguela Global Fund Managers between 2016 and 2021.
Melchior Koba
China announced on Friday, April 24, the launch of an international artificial intelligence competition focused on African innovators. The initiative coincides with the celebration of 70 years of diplomatic relations between China and several African countries.
The program operates under the Secretariat of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC). It reflects China’s strategy to engage African innovation ecosystems at a time when artificial intelligence drives economic transformation and global competitiveness.
The competition aims to identify projects that address key development challenges across Africa. It targets solutions in healthcare, education, industry, scientific research, and public services.
At the same time, the program prioritizes high-impact technologies that can integrate into broader digital transformation frameworks across the continent.
Beyond the competition itself, China positions the initiative as an international showcase platform for African innovators. Selected projects will receive increased visibility and publication in an international compendium.
In addition, organizers will connect winners with collaboration opportunities within China’s technology ecosystem. This includes potential partnerships with Chinese AI actors and institutions.
The program also includes an immersion component in China for selected winners. The organizers expect this step to strengthen exchanges between African project developers and Chinese AI experts.
As a result, the initiative aims to facilitate skills transfer and accelerate partnership development in a rapidly evolving technology sector.
China opens the competition to students, researchers, entrepreneurs, and digital professionals across Africa. The program does not require formal institutional affiliation. Instead, evaluators focus on idea relevance, innovation level, and potential impact.
Authorities set the application deadline for May 29, 2026, through an online submission platform.
Samira Njoya