Goodwell Investments is seeking partnerships with revenue-generating companies across Africa. They specifically target enterprises led by African founders that provide essential goods or services with a strong social or environmental impact. Selected companies will receive funding, hands-on operational support, mentorship, and access to an extensive global network. Submissions are due online by Wednesday, December 31, 2025.

Posted On mardi, 09 décembre 2025 11:30 Written by

The Imagine H2O Accelerator has opened its application window to African water startups. Eligible companies must be under seven years old, have less than $5 million in revenue, and have secured less than $10 million in total funding. This program is non-equity-taking and provides mentorship, specialized training, and introductions to a massive worldwide network of industry leaders, investors, and founders. The application deadline is December 31st.

Posted On mardi, 09 décembre 2025 11:30 Written by

South African enterprise AI startup Ageiro has raised 3 million dollars to scale its autonomous agent platform, which turns business objectives into production-ready applications within days. The company plans to use the funding to strengthen its decision models, enhance compliance tooling and expand commercial operations, framing software autonomy as a core driver of enterprise digital transformation.

Posted On mardi, 09 décembre 2025 11:23 Written by
  • Norbert Haguma founded Swapinga in February 2025 to provide vehicle financing for micro-entrepreneurs.
  • The platform requires a 20% down payment and approves applications within seven days without demanding real estate collateral.
  • Haguma brings experience from previous roles at Smart Africa, SPENN Technology, and NALA.

Entrepreneur Norbert Haguma is reshaping economic inclusion in a sector where financing remains a major hurdle. He utilizes technology to transform how drivers access their work tools.

Norbert Haguma specializes in fintech, mobility, and Africa-China relations. He serves as the founder and CEO of Swapinga. The company focuses on financial technologies and mobility solutions. Haguma established the firm in February 2025. Swapinga targets drivers and micro-entrepreneurs who seek vehicle ownership. The platform offers a simplified financing solution to boost their revenues. The company aims to remove the primary barriers regarding access to automotive credit.

The system relies on a four-step process. The candidate submits a request via an online form. The team reviews the file and provides an answer within seven days. Successful applicants must open a bank account. They subsequently pay a 20% down payment on the purchase amount. The driver then takes possession of the vehicle to launch or expand their business.

Swapinga promotes a model that requires neither land nor housing as collateral. This feature is decisive for drivers who traditional banks often exclude. The enterprise specifically targets actors in the taxi ecosystem and mobility platforms such as YEGO.

Haguma holds a seat on the board of the Pan-African Council. This organization commits to the unification of Africa and its diaspora. He also acts as a Senior Associate at Africa Equity Group. This firm provides operational consulting, market analysis, and financial support.

Haguma created his first enterprise, AfrOrient Group, in China in 2009. The company operates in trade and investment. He subsequently co-founded the edtech startup Kiziga in China in 2012. This startup develops a platform that allows Africans to apply, pay, and obtain documents for studies in China. He participated in the creation of AfricaGen in Kigali in 2018. This organization dedicates itself to mobilizing Africans through technology.

Norbert Haguma holds a degree from Beijing Jiaotong University. He obtained a bachelor's in computer science and technology and a master's in business administration there. He joined the Embassy of the Republic of Rwanda in China as an IT engineer in 2009.

Haguma became the head of the Blockchain Hub and the African hub for digital transformation at Smart Africa in 2018. He worked at SPENN Technology from 2020 to 2024. He successively occupied the positions of Country Director for Rwanda, Head of Africa Partnerships, and Non-Executive Director. He served as Country Director for the fintech NALA in Rwanda between September 2024 and February 2025.

This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba

Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum

Posted On mardi, 09 décembre 2025 03:03 Written by
  • Mobidoto, created in January 2025, delivers offline-friendly digital training for community health workers.
  • The platform offers structured modules, continuous training pathways and formal certification.
  • The startup launched DotoIA in November 2025, a free WhatsApp-based revision assistant for health students.

Maessarath Rafiou, a Beninese medical doctor, founded and leads Mobidoto, a social-impact company that focuses on digital training for African health workers. She created Mobidoto in January 2025 and designed the platform as a continuous-learning tool usable in professional settings, including areas with weak connectivity. The application offers training pathways, structured modules and a certification system that validates acquired skills.

The Mobidoto website includes a “Resources” section that hosts educational materials, including e-books accessible through a dedicated page. These materials complement the app’s training modules and give health professionals practical tools for daily work. The platform mainly targets community health workers, aspiring community health workers, community relays, nurses, midwives and doctors.

The startup launched DotoIA in November 2025, a free revision assistant for health students available via WhatsApp. The chatbot delivers simplified explanations, short quizzes and full mobile access that works even under limited connectivity. The tool aims to support students as they prepare for exams.

Rafiou practices medicine at Dr Pierre Boni Clinic in Benin. She also founded and presides over OASIS Benin, an organisation created in 2017 that supports preventive care across Benin and the sub-region through awareness campaigns, information sessions and health-promotion initiatives.

She graduated from the Faculty of Health Sciences in Cotonou, where she earned a medical doctorate. Between 2016 and 2017, she served as project manager for Benin Health Movement, an organisation engaged in health-promotion activities in Benin.

This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba

Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum

Posted On mardi, 09 décembre 2025 02:34 Written by

Investisseurs & Partenaires has completed a first close of €41 million (about $47.7 million) for its Africa Entrepreneurs 3 fund. The fund is targeting $81.5 million in total and expects a second close in 2026. It plans to invest $1.2 million to $5.9 million in 15 to 20 small and medium-sized enterprises operating in sectors including education, health, energy, agribusiness, logistics, financial services and manufacturing, with a strong emphasis on climate and gender impact.

Posted On lundi, 08 décembre 2025 08:15 Written by

Pan-African fund Five35 Ventures has received an anchor investment from the Mauritius-based Mennonite Economic Development Associates (MEDA), which manages the Mastercard Foundation Africa Growth Fund. The capital will strengthen Five35 Ventures’ backing for women-led technology startups across East, West and Southern Africa. The fund seeks to bridge the gap between seed funding and scaling up by combining capital, strategic guidance and access to a broad network of mentors and investors.

Posted On lundi, 08 décembre 2025 08:07 Written by

Send by Flutterwave, a money-transfer service, is rolling out a physical naira card for Nigerians living abroad who are visiting the country over the holidays. The card is linked to the app and can be topped up with U.S., European or U.K. bank cards. It works on POS terminals, ATMs and contactless payment systems across Nigeria. The product is designed to help visitors bypass cash-withdrawal limits, unstable exchange rates and frequent problems with foreign cards.

Posted On lundi, 08 décembre 2025 08:03 Written by
  • Ethiopia launches E-Tamirt platform to streamline industrial sourcing and sales

  • Tool supports supply-chain efficiency and boosts competitiveness under digital strategy

  • GSMA projects sizable economic gains as digitalization expands across sectors

Ethiopia’s Ministry of Industry, in partnership with state-owned Ethio Telecom, on Tuesday launched an e-commerce platform called E-Tamirt. The platform provides a centralized marketplace where manufacturers can source raw materials, connect with suppliers and sell their products to buyers in Ethiopia and regional markets.

According to Ethio Telecom, E-Tamirt will play a strategic role in strengthening the shift from retail-based trade to manufacturing and will help local products compete more effectively with imports.

Industry Minister Melaku Alebel said the platform helps ease supply and distribution bottlenecks by providing a unified digital channel for industrial transactions. He added that it supports national efforts to increase production capacity, foster innovation and improve long-term competitiveness.

The initiative is part of Ethiopia’s broader digital transformation agenda. In late November, the government adopted a new digital strategy running through 2030 to expand digital public services, modernize the economy and promote digital inclusion.

The GSMA estimates that Ethiopia’s digital transformation could add 319 billion birr, or nearly 2 billion dollars, to the economy by 2028, with major gains expected in agriculture, transport, health, public administration, trade and industry.

The industrial sector alone could generate 108 billion birr, create 180,000 jobs and add 9 billion birr in tax revenue. According to the GSMA, Ethiopia’s manufacturing activity is still heavily centered on agro-processing, but there is substantial potential for growth through diversification, higher industrial output, stronger investment in research and development and greater local processing and value creation. Digital technologies can also help the government raise manufacturing exports from 13 percent in 2019 to 48 percent by 2030.

Isaac K. Kassouwi

Posted On samedi, 06 décembre 2025 18:41 Written by
  • Burkina Faso enforces 2023 telecom rules, extending balances and boosting user rights
  • Consumers say measures still miss core demand for lower internet prices
  • Regulator reports price drops, though affordability remains far above ITU benchmark

Burkina Faso’s telecom regulator announced new consumer protection rules on Tuesday, but customers said the measures fall short of their main demand: lower internet prices.

The Regulatory Authority for Electronic Communications and Posts (ARCEP) said the rules, suspended since they were adopted in 2023, are now enforceable following a court ruling. The changes include extending the validity of users’ main account balances from 90 to 180 days, allowing promotional credits to be used across all networks, and giving customers a grace period to reclaim unused call credit and data. The regulator also set a minimum one-month validity for 1-GB data bundles.

Alongside lower prices, subscribers are calling for clearer improvements in service quality, slower data depletion, better usage-tracking tools, and new offers such as unlimited plans.

The rules were drafted after a consumer boycott movement in mid-April 2023 targeted operators Orange, Moov Africa and Telecel over high costs and poor service. Public frustration has persisted since then, often voiced on social media.

ARCEP says the new measures are “concrete, objective and operational,” and will help lower service costs and strengthen consumer protections. 

According to Executive Secretary Wendlassida Patrice Compaoré, the changes have already reduced the average prices of standard mobile internet plans from Orange Burkina Faso and ONATEL by between 28% and 45%, depending on plans with at least a one-month validity. Regulatory decisions regarding Orange Burkina Faso have also halved SMS prices to other national networks and forced operators to gradually make bonuses usable across all networks.

The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) reveals that monthly mobile internet spending in Burkina Faso amounted to 8.8% of GNI per capita in 2025. For a service to be considered affordable, this ratio must be below 2%. The African average is 5.32%, compared with 1.38% globally.

Isaac K. Kassouwi

Posted On samedi, 06 décembre 2025 18:23 Written by
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