South African bank Capitec is acquiring payment firm Walletdoc for $23.5 million. The transaction includes an immediate payment of 300 million rand ($17.6 million) and 100 million rand ($5.8 million) in contingent consideration. The deal is intended to bring Walletdoc’s technology into Capitec’s business-services platform and strengthen the bank’s position in e-commerce.
The Egyptian platform MoneyHash is partnering with Saudi firm Amwal Tech to boost adoption of local payment methods and offer installment plans. The partnership strengthens MoneyHash’s presence in Saudi Arabia and makes it easier for merchants to add new payment options for their customers.
Ezeebit, a pan-African company specializing in cryptocurrency and stablecoin payments, has raised $2.05 million in a seed funding round. The funds will support expansion in South Africa, Kenya and Nigeria, and help strengthen partnerships with banks and telecom operators. Ezeebit aims to reduce the cost and processing time of digital payments across the continent.
Gara Store has signed a strategic deal to distribute Média-Participations' French-language catalog across Africa.
The partnership addresses structural market barriers including mobile-first access and local payment constraints.
Média-Participations targets Africa as a priority expansion market following growth in Europe, America, and Asia.
The African digital content market experiences rapid growth. A young and connected population drives this trend. However, infrastructure limits access. High costs and a lack of adapted platforms also impede the sector.
Gara Store announced a strategic distribution agreement with European group Média-Participations on Tuesday, December 9. Gara Store operates as an African digital content distribution platform. Média-Participations functions as a major player in French-language comics and family entertainment. This partnership targets the African public with thousands of iconic works. It also strengthens the group's presence in an expanding market.
The agreement covers the French-language catalog of Média-Participations. This inventory includes comics, youth content, and spiritual works. Gara Store will integrate these titles into its system. The platform currently conducts tests in several African countries during its deployment phase. The developers designed the system to address structural obstacles on the continent. These challenges include payment difficulties, mobile Internet access, and local economic constraints. The partners also present the deal as a lever for the African digital entertainment market. It supports creators. It builds a competitive local cultural ecosystem.
The collaboration occurs as the African digital content market sees sustained growth. The continent counts more than 670 million Internet users. Mobile devices provide access for a majority of these users. Mobile networks handle over 70% of Internet connections in Africa. Online entertainment demand increases rapidly within a very young population. People under 25 represent more than 60% of this demographic. However, legal access to cultural content remains limited despite this dynamic. High costs cause this bottleneck. Payment difficulties and fragmented catalogs also contribute to the problem.
Média-Participations views this agreement as a strategic step in its international expansion. The group targets Africa as a new priority market following Europe, America, and Asia. Julien Papelier, General Director of the group, highlighted the significance of the move. "This agreement opens many perspectives for generations of Africans who will discover or rediscover our iconic titles."
The partnership between Gara Store and Média-Participations should expand access to reference content on the continent. The deal aims to encourage collaboration between African creators and international players. It demonstrates the potential of the African digital entertainment market. It generates economic opportunities for the entire value chain. Furthermore, data collected via the platform will help analysts understand local usages and expectations. This insight allows the companies to anticipate future market needs.
This article was initially published in French by Samira Njoya
Adapted in English y Ange Jason Quenum
Burkina Faso creates the “Criminal Justice System Module” to allow citizens to file complaints online starting 15 December 2025.
The platform aims to reduce administrative delays, strengthen transparency and streamline judicial workflows.
Burkina Faso ranked 175th out of 193 countries in the UN 2024 E-Government Development Index, highlighting the scale of digitalisation challenges.
Burkina Faso continues to accelerate its digital transformation as the country faces persistent obstacles to accessing justice. Authorities develop digital tools to simplify procedures, strengthen transparency and improve the responsiveness of judicial services nationwide.
The Ministry of Digital Transition and the Ministry of Justice announced on Tuesday, December 9, the completion of the “Parquet Module of the Criminal Justice System,” a platform designed to enable citizens to file complaints online with public prosecutors across Burkina Faso. The government plans to officially launch the system on December 15, 2025, in Ouagadougou.
Authorities present the Parquet Module as a major public-service modernisation tool. The platform will allow citizens to submit complaints remotely and will give judicial actors the ability to process cases securely and in an integrated manner, from initial filing to verdict. The solution aims to cut administrative delays, reinforce traceability and streamline the work of legal professionals.
The launch aligns with the government’s digital-transformation policy, pursued for several years. Authorities generalised the online criminal-record system in 2023, progressively digitised the penal chain and modernised the Justice Ministry’s information systems. The initiative also responds to structural constraints that continue to hinder access to justice, including slow procedures, congested clerks’ offices and mobility challenges in certain regions.
With the Module Parquet, authorities expect to offer citizens a smoother experience and reduce pressure on physical service counters. The platform should accelerate information flows, improve transparency in complaint processing and strengthen proximity between prosecutors and users. Over time, the data generated by the service will help authorities refine the management of the penal chain and support reforms aimed at making justice more accessible and efficient nationwide.
The United Nations’ E-Government Development Index, which measures online public-service delivery, telecom connectivity and human-capacity levels, ranked Burkina Faso 175th out of 193 countries in 2024 with a low score of 0.2895. The ranking highlights the scale of the remaining challenges in expanding digital public services.
This article was initially published in French by Samira Njoya
Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum
Prime Music Store fills infrastructure gaps for independent Liberian artists.
The platform utilizes a coin-based virtual currency model for revenue generation.
Losine Victory Sanyon Jr. combines tech entrepreneurship with humanitarian leadership.
Losine Victory Sanyon Jr. operates as a Liberian entrepreneur and marketer. He co-founded Prime Technologies. He serves as the CEO of this digital solutions firm. The company includes Prime Music Store in its portfolio.
Prime Technologies launched Prime Music Store in 2024. This online platform facilitates streaming, downloading, and music discovery. It highlights independent Liberian artists specifically. The service connects creators with their audiences. Consequently, the system enables artists to monetize their work. Listeners support performers directly through an interface designed for intuitive use.
The platform employs a structured user journey. Users create accounts first. They purchase "coins" subsequently. They access streaming and downloading services then. Subscribers explore new titles. They create playlists. They personalize their listening experience in a few clicks.
The business model relies on coin purchases. Users utilize this virtual currency for listening, downloading, or tipping. The pricing strategy sets the value at $1 per coin. The company offers various packs to suit different usage levels.
Sanyon Jr. leads HELP International as its president alongside his digital activities. This humanitarian organization operates in Liberia. He also manages social media for Synergy4WBO. This local non-profit supports the profitability of small businesses owned by women and people of color.
Sanyon Jr. holds a diploma from the Hermann Gmeiner International School. He received this credential in 2022. He also graduated from the University of Liberia. He obtained a bachelor's degree in public administration there in January 2025.
This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba
Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum
Charles Nelson Kabwende founded Africa Tech Invest to connect investors with the Congolese startup ecosystem.
The initiative focuses on public sector modernization and the digital sovereignty of African states.
Kabwende holds a dual role as a private entrepreneur and the CISO for the DRC’s tax authority.
Charles Nelson Kabwende operates as an entrepreneur and investor from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). He founded Africa Tech Invest as a dedicated forum for technological innovation and investment on the continent.
Africa Tech Invest established itself as a major event for technology promotion following its inception in 2022. The organization emphasizes the modernization of the public sector. It defends the idea that technology improves public services structurally. The platform also supports entrepreneurship and strengthens the digital sovereignty of African states.
The organizers host the event in Kinshasa at either the Cultural Centre or the Financial Centre. The forum spans one day. It features conferences, executive panels, and keynotes. The schedule includes African startup contests, hackathons, and cybersecurity workshops such as "Capture the Flag" challenges. The Cultural Centre of Kinshasa hosted the 2025 edition on June 25.
Africa Tech Invest functions as a strategic meeting point for the Congolese startup ecosystem. The fair connects entrepreneurs, investors, and public decision-makers. Additionally, the organizers manage a startup competition that values African technological solutions within edtech and artificial intelligence. The initiative aims to surface projects that attract regional and international investment dynamics.
Charles Nelson Kabwende currently serves as the President of ANEMONE. This company manages digital identity for enterprises. He also directs information systems security at the General Directorate of Taxes of the DRC.
He graduated from the Beihang University of Aeronautics and Astronautics. He obtained a bachelor's degree in electronic and computer engineering there in 2016. He also holds a master's degree in business informatics from Riga Technical University in Latvia, which he received in 2021.
His professional path led him to Premise Data in Kinshasa in 2018. He worked there as a country support specialist. He became a project manager at Kelony in 2019. This organization specializes in artificial intelligence. He subsequently served as a consultant in IT, cybersecurity, and blockchain at World Elite Consulting between 2021 and 2022.
This article was initally published in French by Melchior Koba
Adapted in English by Ange Jason, Quenum
Bottomline Assist offers global companies access to West African tech talent at competitive cost.
The platform provides end-to-end services, including technical screening, onboarding, payroll and compliance.
Clients reportedly pay 55% less than global outsourcing competitors while workers earn above local averages.
Africa is emerging as a strategic reserve of tech skills, and local players are organizing to connect this talent base to global markets with greater professionalism and efficiency. Bottomline Assist positions itself within this trend.
Bottomline Assist is a digital solution developed by a Nigerian startup that enables international companies to access qualified tech profiles—including developers, data scientists and support teams—at competitive cost.
The platform combines recruitment, technical screening and operational management to offer a single gateway to outsourced talent from West Africa. Based in Lagos, it launched in 2024 under the leadership of Francis Adelore.
The company builds its core offer on a strict selection process. It conducts local sourcing, technical tests and in-depth interviews to identify operational candidates quickly. Bottomline Assist complements this talent pipeline with managed services, including contracting, payroll, local compliance and onboarding.
Clients gain access to quality skills and lower salary costs while maintaining direct control over their teams. Local professionals receive international employment opportunities, often with upskilling programs and career support.
Francis Adelore says, “We have raised the bar for talent outsourcing in Africa with stricter requirements than most traditional firms regarding training, experience and communication skills.” He adds, “Meanwhile, our clients benefit from rates that are 55% more affordable than those of major global players. This creates a rare win-win situation: clients achieve significant savings while employees earn far higher wages than those generally offered by local employers.”
Bottomline Assist targets a rapidly expanding segment. Global demand for competitive tech resources continues to grow as companies search for alternatives to traditional recruitment channels.
By offering a combination of local sourcing and administrative services—such as payroll, compliance and HR management—the startup facilitates long-term collaboration between foreign companies and African talent.
This article was initially published in French by Adoni Conrad Quenum
Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum
Black Swan builds alternative AI-based credit-scoring tools for Africa’s informal economy.
The fintech won the 2025 MEST Africa Challenge and secured a $50,000 investment.
The company uses non-traditional data such as mobile-money flows and merchant-terminal activity to estimate borrower capacity.
Derick Kazimoto develops a new method to interpret economic traces and reshapes how lenders analyze credit risk. He opens access to previously untapped information that financial institutions use to refine their lending decisions.
Kazimoto, an entrepreneur and consultant based in Dar es Salaam, co-founded and currently leads Black Swan. The fintech, registered in Mauritius, builds alternative data-analytics tools that enable lenders to assess solvency with higher precision and broader flexibility.
Black Swan, founded in 2022, focuses its operations on the informal economy in sub-Saharan Africa. The company designs AI-based evaluation models that rely on non-traditional data to expand financing access for SMEs, micro-entrepreneurs, traders and individuals with limited banking history.
The company’s core product is an alternative credit-scoring engine. The system estimates the borrowing and repayment capacity of individuals or small businesses without depending on conventional bank-history checks. The models integrate mobile-money transactions, merchant-terminal receipts, recurring bill payments and a broad range of digital footprints. Lenders can combine these scores with their internal systems to refine risk models.
Black Swan won the seventh edition of the MEST Africa Challenge in November 2025. The award granted the company a USD 50,000 investment and entry into the MEST portfolio.
“Our mission is to make Africa bankable. We believe the continent is shifting from informal, collateral-heavy lending to data-driven credit. This transformation changes how banks and fintechs trust, lend and grow,” said Black Swan CEO Derick Kazimoto after the announcement.
Alongside his role at Black Swan, Kazimoto works as a fintech consultant for AfroPavo Analytics, a Tanzanian company that builds digital solutions using data analysis. He also co-founded Tausi Africa, an AfroPavo subsidiary that develops financial tools.
Kazimoto earned a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering from the University of Cape Town in 2019, followed by a master’s degree in financial technology in 2021. He began his career the same year as a data scientist at Spoon Money, a South African fintech. He later joined Akeo Tanzania, the development hub of the Akeo Group, where he served as country director from 2021 to 2022.
This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba
Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum
Djibouti prepares to operationalize its new National Cybersecurity Authority.
The agency receives equipment and a defined mandate to oversee national cyber norms and incident response.
The move aligns with the country’s ambition to become a regional tech hub by 2035.
Djibouti plans to bring its newly created National Cybersecurity Authority (ANC) into service as the country pushes to position itself as a regional technology hub by 2035. The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) states that this ambition requires stronger commitments to cybersecurity to unlock the full potential of the digital economy.
Authorities advanced the ANC’s rollout last week during a meeting between senior officials from the Ministry of Digital Economy and the agency’s new director. The session reviewed the progress of ongoing cybersecurity projects, set priority cooperation areas, and organized the delivery of technical equipment.
The government supplies the agency with high-performance computers for incident response, international-standard firewalls and network-security systems, high-capacity servers for sensitive data, monitoring screens for security operations centers, and professional cybersecurity licenses. These tools aim to equip the ANC to oversee and enforce national cyber-defense measures.
The legislation establishing the ANC, which lawmakers examined on November 10, gives the agency responsibility for setting national cybersecurity norms and protection procedures for critical sectors. The law also mandates the creation of a national cyber-incident monitoring and response center, expanded international cooperation against cybercrime, and training and awareness programs for public and private actors.
This institutional buildup forms part of Djibouti’s broader push to secure its digital infrastructure as its digital transformation accelerates. The country has already adopted a National Cybersecurity Strategy and a Digital Code and hosts an annual National Cybersecurity Week. In October 2025 in Hanoi, Djibouti signed the UN Cybercrime Convention, joining 21 African nations among 71 global signatories. The country had previously ratified the African Union’s Malabo Convention on cybersecurity and data protection in November 2023.
Despite these steps, Djibouti remains in the second-to-last tier of the ITU Global Cybersecurity Index, posting 11.84 out of 20 in the legislative pillar. The ITU argues that Djibouti must increase efforts in organizational, technical and capacity-building domains, as well as in international cooperation, to close the gap with regional peers.
This article was initially published in French by Isaac K. Kassouwi
Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum
The government validated the 2026-2030 National Cybersecurity Strategy to strengthen digital resilience amid rising attacks.
Mali ranks Tier 4/5 in the ITU Global Cybersecurity Index 2024, reflecting only “basic” national capabilities.
Recent major breaches targeted the tax authority and Bank of Africa Mali, exposing gaps the new strategy aims to fix.
Mali faces growing cyberthreats and structures its national response. Authorities develop a roadmap to reinforce national resilience, modernize digital governance and protect increasingly targeted infrastructure.
The government formally validated the 2026-2030 National Cybersecurity Strategy during the Council of Ministers on Wednesday, December 5. The framework aims to strengthen the country’s digital resilience as cyberattacks multiply and risks increase across the digital transformation of the state and the economy.
“The sophistication of attacks and the financial damage they inflict on states and companies have turned cybersecurity into a global concern. Despite several legislative and regulatory texts adopted in recent years, Mali did not yet have a coordinated national strategy, which forced each actor to launch isolated actions,” the government said.
The roadmap aligns with major national development orientations, including “Mali Kura ɲɛtaasira ka bɛn san 2063 ma” and the 2024-2033 National Strategy for Emergence and Sustainable Development. These frameworks place digital transformation at the core of administrative modernization, public-service efficiency and economic growth.
The Ministry of Communication and Digital Economy announced the strategy at the start of the year. The plan responds to a situation authorities consider worrying. The ITU Global Cybersecurity Index 2024 ranks Mali at Tier 4 out of 5, a level that reflects “basic” capabilities in technical, organizational and skills-development components.
These limits became visible through several major attacks. In August 2022, Russian cybercriminals reportedly compromised data from 312,000 taxpayers at the Directorate General of Taxes. In February 2023, Bank of Africa Mali suffered one of the most significant cyberattacks recorded against a financial institution in the country. Identity theft and online fraud cases have also increased, affecting administrations, companies and individuals.
The implementation of the National Cybersecurity Strategy is expected to address the most urgent weaknesses in Mali’s digital ecosystem. The framework aims to strengthen the protection of critical infrastructure, create more consistent security standards, improve incident-response systems and structure cooperation with international partners.
Over time, the government expects the strategy to support a more reliable digital environment. Authorities see this as essential to sustain the digitalization of public services, encourage local innovation and attract additional investment into the digital economy.
This article was initially published in French by Samira Njoya
Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum
Gabon signed a partnership with UNCDF to modernize digital financial services and accelerate financial inclusion.
Mobile-money transactions reached CFA4,000 billion ($7 billion) in 2024, yet only 30% of adults hold a bank account.
The agreement prioritizes interinstitutional coordination and technical training on e-money governance, interoperability and consumer protection.
Gabonese authorities aim to better structure the ecosystem of digital financial services. After announcing a partnership with Visa in May, the government continues its efforts with a new agreement designed to strengthen financial inclusion and sector regulation.
The Ministry of Digital Economy, Digitalization and Innovation (MENDI) announced on Monday, December 8, the signing of a partnership with the UN Capital Development Fund (UNCDF). The collaboration seeks to reinforce the digital-finance ecosystem and support the national ambition to make digital technology a driver of state modernization and economic growth.
The initiative centers on two main priorities. The first focuses on interinstitutional dialogue to harmonize public policies, strengthen coordination between stakeholders and establish a permanent consultation framework for digital financial services. The second targets technical-capacity building through training programs for policymakers on key areas such as e-money governance, service interoperability, data protection, financial literacy and user protection.
Authorities also highlight a specific emphasis on reforms that promote competition among service providers, develop essential digital infrastructure and improve mechanisms for consumer protection.
The partnership builds on the national assessment carried out in 2024 by UNCDF. It comes as Gabon seeks to accelerate financial inclusion, which remains uneven. The country recorded more than CFA4,000 billion ($7 billion) in mobile-money transactions in 2024, along with nearly 368 million operations. Nevertheless, only 30% of adults hold a bank account, and rural populations, women and young people remain the most excluded groups.
Sector players regularly point to several obstacles, including service costs, incomplete interoperability between operators, limited financial literacy and weak user trust in digital tools.
The UNCDF intervention is expected to support reforms that modernize the ecosystem and create a more attractive environment for digital-financial-service providers. By reinforcing institutional cooperation, clarifying operational frameworks and improving infrastructure quality, authorities aim to stimulate innovation, attract new services and expand access to more reliable and affordable payment, savings and transfer solutions.
This article was initially published in French by Samira Njoya
Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum
ELLES, created in 2022, offers cycle tracking, contraception information and cancer-prevention alerts.
The app distributes continuous health content and guides women in daily reproductive-health management.
Founder Viviane Oké, a Beninese medical doctor, combines medicine and digital-health strategy to support women’s autonomy.
Viviane Oké introduces a digital solution that strengthens the health autonomy of its users. She deploys a tool that reshapes how women receive support in their daily health management.
Oké, known as Dr. V, is a Beninese medical doctor active in the digital-health sector. She serves as chief executive of ELLES, an application she founded with a group of young Beninese doctors to improve reproductive-health monitoring for women.
ELLES, created in 2022, focuses on reproductive health. The application enables girls and women to track their menstrual cycles and access information on contraceptive methods. It distinguishes natural methods and details their benefits and potential side effects.
The platform also supports breast-cancer prevention by sending alerts at the optimal moment for self-examination and by providing a detailed guide. An integrated news feed delivers a continuous flow of content on the body, sexual health and reproductive health.
Oké graduated from the Faculty of Health Sciences in Cotonou, where she earned her medical doctorate. She also completed a master’s degree in international project management in October 2025 at Senghor University in Alexandria, Egypt.
She worked as a medical translator in 2021 for Smile Train, an international children’s organization. She served in 2022 as a fintech-technology consultant for the GIZ office in Benin. In February 2025, she worked as a physician at Clinique Patte d’Oie in Cotonou.
This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba
Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum
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.