• Tanit AI, founded in 2024, provides an AI-driven digital platform that supports individuals and couples through fertility treatments.

  • The platform uses a specialized AI assistant to decode medical information, track treatment steps and facilitate communication with healthcare providers.

  • Founder Kaïs Zhioua also serves as strategy director at Fertillia and at Clinique La Rose, bringing sector expertise to the startup.

Kaïs Zhioua, a Tunisian entrepreneur and founder of Tanit Healthcare Technologies (Tanit AI), created a digital tool that follows fertility-treatment steps and aims to make the path to parenthood simpler and more predictable. He positions Tanit AI as a “personal companion toward parenthood” powered by artificial intelligence.

Zhioua founded Tanit AI in 2024 as a fertility-focused digital platform that supports individuals and couples from the exploration of options through treatment and potential complications. The platform integrates a fertility-specialized AI assistant that decodes medical information, tracks care pathways and clarifies proposed treatments.

The assistant explains fertility concepts, outlines possible causes of infertility and presents available diagnostic or treatment options. It facilitates conversations with healthcare professionals and supports informed decision-making. The platform guides users throughout treatment by helping them determine when to begin, follow protocols and manage unexpected events.

Tanit AI also provides markers to help users understand where they stand in their journey, consolidate medical information and anticipate next steps.

Zhioua simultaneously serves as strategy director at Fertillia, a Tunisian company specialized in assisted reproduction, and as director of strategy and innovation at Clinique La Rose in Tunis. He previously founded Careways in 2016, a digital tool dedicated to medical tourism.

He graduated from the Mediterranean School of Business with a bachelor’s degree in business administration in 2013 and earned a master’s degree in entrepreneurship from Zhejiang University in China in 2015.

This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba

Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum

Posted On vendredi, 05 décembre 2025 11:11 Written by

Binance has launched Binance Junior, a new sub-account app that lets parents oversee activity while allowing children and teenagers to save in cryptocurrencies. The app offers a flexible savings feature with no trading, enabling young users to accumulate digital assets under parental supervision. Parents can fund the account, set limits and monitor all activity. The platform also includes an educational book, “ABC’s of Crypto,” designed to help families learn about digital finance together.

Posted On vendredi, 05 décembre 2025 06:31 Written by

Nigerian startup Gigmile, founded in 2022, has closed a funding round led by Enza Capital, with participation from Seedstars International Ventures and Norrsken Africa Fund, to support its next phase of expansion. Through its Gamma Mobility rent-to-own model, Gigmile has already provided more than 10,000 vehicles to delivery agents and drivers in Nigeria and Ghana. The company aims to finance $100 million in assets by 2027.

Posted On vendredi, 05 décembre 2025 06:26 Written by

Credit Direct, a Nigerian financial institution, has integrated “Yield” into its mobile app, adding automated savings and investment tools. The platform offers annual returns of up to 21% on fixed-term deposits and 15% on flexible plans. After a simple setup, users can access clear, fully digital products with features such as real-time account management, scheduled contributions and the option to send investment “gifts” to others.

Posted On vendredi, 05 décembre 2025 06:21 Written by

The Judith Neilson Foundation and the Million Lives Collective have launched a new African Cities Innovation Fund. It will provide grants of up to $75,000 for projects linking startups, civic groups and public-sector partners.

The goal is to test digital and infrastructure solutions for mobility, basic services and climate resilience in fast-growing African cities.

Posted On jeudi, 04 décembre 2025 14:25 Written by

The Egyptian platform Taager, which allows thousands of independent sellers to run online businesses without holding inventory or upfront capital, has launched operations in Morocco after earlier rollouts in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. The Moroccan arm, led by Salma Ammor, aims to tap into the country’s fast-growing e-commerce market and make it easier for more people to start selling online.

Posted On jeudi, 04 décembre 2025 13:49 Written by
  • Hit The Road Today, founded in 2024, centralizes accommodation, food services and activities to help travelers plan road-trips across South Africa.

  • The platform operates as a booking and matchmaking tool for travelers and tourism providers, who can register to offer their services.

  • CEO Daniel Adidwa also leads Tour2.0 and The Adidwa Group, adding tourism-sector experience and entrepreneurial background to the project.

He aims to offer travelers a memorable and distinctive experience. He develops a tool focused on route preparation and access to services along the road.

Daniel Adidwa, a South African entrepreneur, serves as co-founder and chief executive officer of Hit The Road Today, an online travel platform positioned around road-trip experiences in the country.

Founded in 2024, Hit The Road Today presents itself as a portal for travelers who want to plan journeys across South Africa by road. The platform supports the preparation of each stage of a road-trip, including accommodation, food and activities, by gathering the relevant services in a single space.

From the homepage, users enter a starting point and a destination. The site then proposes selections of places to sleep, eat or explore along the way. The platform aims to centralize available options and reduce the need for travelers to switch between multiple platforms.

Hit The Road Today functions as a matchmaking and booking tool. It allows travelers to reserve accommodation, meals or activities. It also enables tourism providers to register as suppliers and offer their services to users.

Alongside this project, Adidwa serves as director of Tour2.0, a provider of urban, cultural and community-based tourism experiences in South Africa. He also leads The Adidwa Group, a company active in trade and international development that he founded in 2019.

He graduated from the AAA School of Advertising, where he earned a marketing degree in 2009. He joined J. Walter Thompson Worldwide in 2010 as an account manager for Nestlé Chocolates & Ice Cream. In 2015, he became vice-chair of the youth steering committee of RETOSA in Johannesburg. Between 2021 and 2023, he served as South Africa lead for the British Council’s Innovation for African Universities programme.

This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba

Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum

Posted On jeudi, 04 décembre 2025 12:50 Written by
  • Adjunct, founded in 2024, develops an AI assistant that automates legal research and compliance tasks for South African lawyers.

  • The platform identifies relevant legal documents from public databases and, when authorized, from internal firm resources, then produces structured, source-referenced outputs.

  • Co-founder and CEO Alessandro Scarcella previously worked as a data scientist and machine-learning engineer in several South African tech companies.

He targets a core segment of legal work through artificial intelligence. His innovation aims to transform how legal professionals access information and manage case files.

Alessandro Scarcella, an entrepreneur and artificial intelligence engineer based in Johannesburg, serves as the co-founder and chief executive officer of Adjunct, a start-up that develops an AI assistant for South African lawyers.

Adjunct, which Scarcella and chief operating officer Julia Ramsunder founded in 2024, supports legal practitioners in their research, their compliance duties and their management of judicial procedures. The platform primarily addresses professionals operating in South Africa and uses legislation and court decisions drawn from the national legal framework.

The tool automates a share of routine work inside law firms or legal departments, and it frees time for analysis and strategic advice. It does not replace legal reasoning, and it operates as a support system for information processing.

Users start by submitting a question in natural language. The request may be a precise query, a list of issues or notes taken during a meeting. Based on this initial input, the assistant may ask follow-up questions to clarify the need and direct the search.

Once the request is defined, Adjunct identifies relevant documents in public databases and, when authorized, in the internal resources of a firm or organization. The tool then generates a structured response grounded in these sources and returns it with precise citations to allow verification.

The platform connects to several types of legal content, including national legislation and case law. The company plans to integrate additional categories, such as provincial laws, regulations and local administrative orders.

Scarcella graduated from the University of Cape Town, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in finance in 2014 and a master’s degree in machine learning and statistics in 2016. He built his career in several technology companies before launching his start-up.

He joined Cortex Logic in 2017 as a data scientist and became a machine-learning engineer in 2019. He moved to the online delivery service Mr D Food in 2022, where he worked as a data scientist until 2024.

This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba

Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum

Posted On jeudi, 04 décembre 2025 12:41 Written by
  • ECOWAS drafts its first regional e-government strategy to harmonize public-service digitalization.
  • The plan includes shared cybersecurity mechanisms, interoperable digital infrastructure and data-governance frameworks.
  • Ghana, Cape Verde, Côte d’Ivoire and Senegal show the strongest national progress, according to the UN DESA 2024 Index.

ECOWAS is developing its first regional e-government strategy as West African states accelerate national digital-administration reforms. Government officials, ICT experts and technical partners met last week in Abuja to review and validate the strategic directions of the forthcoming framework.

The strategy aims to build an interoperable public digital infrastructure for the region, strengthen data-governance systems, and support member states in modernizing administrative services. It also seeks to introduce shared cybersecurity mechanisms and align national policies that remain fragmented across the bloc.

The initiative complements ongoing ECOWAS digital-transformation programs such as WARDIP, which targets faster regional digital integration. It also reflects the ambitions of ECOWAS Vision 2050, which calls for a connected, resilient community built on modern institutions.

Member states have already undertaken major e-government reforms. Ghana has launched reference digital-ID platforms; Cape Verde continues to consolidate one of the region’s most advanced electronic administrations; Côte d’Ivoire is betting on centralized online public services; and Senegal is expanding its e-services ecosystem, supported by a unique identifier and interoperability systems. A regional strategy is now seen as a natural step to scale and coordinate these efforts.

If adopted, the strategy could significantly improve administrative efficiency, enable secure data circulation, strengthen transparency and accelerate regional integration by allowing citizens and businesses to access public services across borders.

According to the 2024 UN DESA E-Government Development Index, several ECOWAS states rank among West Africa’s top performers. Ghana stands at 108th globally, followed by Cape Verde (109th), Côte d’Ivoire (124th) and Senegal (135th). These rankings highlight a strong regional momentum and show that, despite uneven progress, the foundations for a shared strategy are already in place.

 Samira Njoya

Posted On jeudi, 04 décembre 2025 02:52 Written by
  • MbiyoPay integrates mobile money, bank cards, crypto and digital tools into a single payment platform.
  • The app is already operational in the DRC, Cameroon and Côte d’Ivoire after a 2023 launch.
  • Founder Joel Mirimo previously created Maxuschain, a crypto-trading platform supporting 30+ cryptocurrencies.

In the Democratic Republic of Congo, entrepreneur Joel Mirimo has launched MbiyoPay, an application that consolidates digital payments by integrating mobile money, bank cards, cryptocurrencies and other digital solutions. The company aims to simplify and secure financial transactions for users across multiple African markets.

Mirimo, the founder and CEO of MbiyoPay, developed the platform to help consumers manage payments from a single smartphone. The app reflects his broader goal to streamline day-to-day transactions and expand access to digital financial tools.

MbiyoPay, founded in 2023, enables users to create virtual cards, receive money, pay bills and buy mobile credit without switching between multiple services. The platform centralizes transactions and reduces fragmentation by allowing users to collect payments from clients or receive transfers from individuals in one digital environment.

The app accepts several payment methods, including mobile money, bank cards, cryptocurrencies, QR codes, payment links and its own dedicated virtual card. MbiyoPay allows users to recharge the virtual card and make secure online payments on international platforms.

MbiyoPay has already rolled out services in several African countries, including the Democratic Republic of Congo, Cameroon and Côte d’Ivoire. Users can verify availability in each market directly through the app. The platform also lets users transfer funds to mobile money accounts, bank accounts or crypto wallets depending on their preferred channel.

Before launching MbiyoPay, Mirimo founded Maxuschain in 2022, a platform offering instant cryptocurrency trading via mobile money. Maxuschain supported more than 30 cryptocurrencies and integrated four blockchains.

Mirimo holds a bachelor’s degree in marketing and commercial and financial sciences obtained in August 2025. He worked as a payment agent and broker at Deriv, an international financial company, from 2021 to September 2025. He also served as business development director at Afgig, a 100% African marketplace connecting continental talent to global markets, from 2021 to 2024.

This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba

Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum

Posted On jeudi, 04 décembre 2025 02:49 Written by
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