In Nigeria, fintech firm Karsa positions itself as a gateway to the U.S. banking system. The company offers a simple, secure and cost-efficient way to receive, save and spend dollars while leveraging the potential of stablecoins.
Karsa is a solution developed by the Nigerian fintech of the same name. The company provides Nigerians with a virtual U.S. dollar banking service, which includes a fully digital USD account and a virtual Visa card. Founders Shahryar Hasnani and Dale Wilson launched the start-up in 2024.
Hasnani told Disrupt Africa that Nigerians still face fragmented tools for cross-border payments. “In Nigeria, transferring money internationally still means using a dozen different tools. You get paid through one app, you convert your money through another, you store your savings in a third, and you still cannot easily spend those dollars,” he said. He added: “There is no simple and reliable solution for managing money internationally, especially for remote workers, freelancers and anyone who wants to hold U.S. dollars.”
Karsa operates through a mobile app available on iOS and Android. Play Store data shows more than one thousand downloads. The platform lets users receive dollar payments, including from marketplaces such as Upwork or Fiverr, and send funds to any bank account worldwide with reduced fees. The service aims to ease financial mobility for international workers, freelancers and individuals with foreign-currency income or obligations.
The fintech also allows users to save in dollars while earning returns. The company’s website reports a 4–5% interest rate tied to yields from “US Treasury yield” instruments. This feature helps users protect their savings from naira volatility while earning a competitive dollar return.
On the spending side, Karsa says users can pay internationally through a virtual Visa card, which offers some of the most competitive fees on the market. The company’s roadmap also includes a physical card launch.
Nigeria already shows strong adoption of stablecoins. In this context, Karsa’s offer could attract users looking for a secure and liquid refuge in a strong currency.
This article was initially published in French by Adoni Conrad Quenum
Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum
He develops initiatives that are reshaping how young people approach technology, opening new opportunities to experiment, create, and build practical solutions.
Dodji Honou is a serial entrepreneur who has spent several years building fab labs across West Africa. Based in Côte d'Ivoire, he is the co-founder and CEO of HFabLab, a digital fabrication laboratory designed to promote hands-on learning for young people, regardless of their background or language.
Founded in 2021, HFabLab offers a space where people can design, build, and refine everyday objects. The initiative helps turn ideas into prototypes, test new approaches, and develop projects that respond to real-world needs.
The lab develops training programs built around practical, experience-based learning. Participants are introduced to digital fabrication tools and learn to use them to design and carry out their own projects. HFabLab runs workshops for audiences ranging from children to adults, with sessions tailored to different skill levels. Courses cover robotics, drone piloting, laser cutting, electronics, programming, IoT devices and 3D printing.
Alongside HFabLab, Dodji Honou is also the co-founder and CEO of H-Venture, an Ivorian technology company. He serves as President of Forum 2040, a think tank focused on the future of learning ecosystems in Côte d'Ivoire, and as Vice-President of the Francophone Network of West African Fab Labs (ReFFAO). He is also a makerspace and fab lab specialist with JokkoLabs.
Before founding H-Venture and HFabLab, Honou co-founded Digitek Plus in 2016, which he managed until 2019. The company provided tech services to micro- and small businesses in the informal sector and offered IT training to young people who left school early.
Honou graduated from École libre africaine des technologies et des sciences appliquées (ELATSA) in Togo in 2009 with a Bachelor's degree in Marketing Management and Communication. From 2012 to 2015, he served as Executive Director of Woelab in Lomé. During that same period, from 2013 to 2014, he worked with the Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie (OIF) as a Fab Lab facilitator and multimedia specialist.
Melchior Koba
Noting the limitations of existing payment tools, he set out to rethink how they are used and built an interface that makes money transfers simpler and more intuitive.
Casimir Akuete Domlan is a Togolese entrepreneur specializing in fintech solutions and the Chief Executive Officer of LeGombo, a financial technology company he co-founded with Attisso Luz Koumedzro.
Founded in 2020 as eGo Transfert, LeGombo allows users to send, receive, and manage money through a mobile application or online interface. The platform is designed to make everyday transactions easier by avoiding the frequent limitations users face with traditional mobile network operators and payment systems.
The start-up operates as an aggregator, connecting users to essential financial services such as mobile money, bank cards, and other payment methods. In addition to basic money transfers, LeGombo offers online payment solutions, including the ability for users to generate a virtual card for e-commerce platforms and digital services. In October 2025, the company expanded its operations to Benin and Burkina Faso.
Domlan holds a Bachelor’s degree in Software Architecture from the École supérieure de gestion, d’informatique et de sciences (ESGIS) in Togo, which he earned in 2017. He later received a certificate in Operational Unit Management from Ascencia Business School in France in 2021.
Between 2017 and 2018, he worked both as a Community Manager and an IT Technician for Orange in Burkina Faso, while also serving as a Community Manager for ASMADE, a Burkinabe NGO focused on improving living and working conditions. In 2021, he completed an internship in innovation project management at Togo Invest Corporation S.A.
Domlan has received national recognition for his work. In 2020, he won first prize at the OpenHack competition organized by NunyaLab and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). In 2022, he again won first prize at the Togo Digital Awards in the “Achievement of the Year” category.
Melchior Koba
Plan includes national health data system, online services, and AI tools
Aims to ease system strain, but rural gaps and training remain key hurdles
Amid rising demographic pressure and growing strains on its healthcare system, Egypt is accelerating its digital transformation with a new national roadmap for the health sector. The country aims to leverage digital technologies to modernize management, expand access, and improve service efficiency.
Egypt officially unveiled its National Digital Health Strategy 2025-2029 on Saturday, November 15. Presented by Minister of Health and Population Khaled Abdel Ghaffar during the 3rd World Congress on Population, Health and Development (PHDC’25), the roadmap sets the foundation for a fully digitized health system by 2029.
A core element of the strategy is the creation of an integrated digital ecosystem intended to modernize health services through the systematic use of information technology. Key measures include consolidating national health data, building secure and interoperable digital platforms and expanding access to online services to improve the speed and reliability of patient monitoring.
The initiative falls under the broader “Digital Egypt 2030” transformation strategy, which places health among its priority areas. Implementation is supported by favorable conditions: the ICT sector is one of the fastest-growing in the Egyptian economy, and internet penetration exceeds 80%, according to DataReportal. Still, persistent disparities between urban and rural areas could slow the rollout of e-health solutions.
Several previous initiatives show that Egypt has already begun laying the groundwork for this transition. Millions of electronic medical records have been created under the universal health insurance program, while new platforms for telemedicine, hospital automation, and AI-assisted medical analysis continue to emerge.
For the government, the objective is twofold: to improve the efficiency of an overburdened healthcare system where bureaucratic bottlenecks and barriers to care remain widespread, and to strengthen national resilience against health crises, a priority underscored by the COVID-19 pandemic, which exposed the limits of traditional systems.
Implementing the strategy will require overcoming several challenges. Training health professionals to use new digital tools remains essential, as does strengthening cybersecurity to protect sensitive data. Expanding connectivity in underserved regions will also be critical to ensuring equitable access to digital health services.
Samira Njoya
Morocco launches Gamification Lab to support gaming start-ups and innovation
Initiative targets public-sector adoption in education, health, and tourism
Part of broader push to grow creative economy, now with 40 gaming start-ups
Morocco’s Ministry of Youth, Culture and Communication has partnered with the state-owned Caisse de dépôt et de gestion (CDG) and its investment arm, CDG Invest, to launch the “Gamification Lab” program. The agreement, signed in Rabat on Thursday, November 13, aims to boost local development and strengthen Morocco’s position in the fast-growing video game market.
The Gamification Lab will create a national platform to promote and facilitate the adoption of gamification solutions developed by Moroccan start-ups. These tools will be made available to public- and private-sector organizations active in education, health, culture, employment, and tourism.
Minister of Youth, Culture and Communication Mohamed Mehdi Bensaid said the initiative is part of a broader effort to support small cultural businesses, particularly those involved in video gaming. He noted the sector’s rapid expansion, pointing out that Morocco now counts around 40 gaming start-ups, compared with just two or three in 2021.
This new agreement follows recent efforts to organize and develop the gaming ecosystem. Last May, two agreements were signed to strengthen professional training in gaming-related careers. One introduced dedicated university programs in video game development, while the other created three vocational pathways: e-sport caster, e-sport streamer, and video game laboratory technician.
The announcement comes at a time when Africa’s gaming market is experiencing strong momentum. According to a report released in February by the African publisher Carry1st and research firm Newzoo, the sector generated 1.8 billion dollars in 2024, up 12.4 percent from 2023. By comparison, the global market grew by only 2.1 percent.
Through this partnership, Moroccan authorities aim to support content creation, strengthen the broader start-up ecosystem, and develop skilled employment. Their goal is to position Morocco as one of Africa’s emerging hubs in the creative and digital economy.
Samira Njoya
Recognizing the need for structured learning in the AI boom, this Egyptian entrepreneur is developing a systematic method for integrating artificial intelligence tools into daily workflows.
Nabil Khalifa, an Egyptian entrepreneur based between Chicago and Cairo, is the co-founder and CEO of Meska AI, a 2024 startup that aims to make artificial intelligence accessible to individuals and organisations. The company offers training, consulting and events focused on practical uses of AI.
Meska AI positions itself as a resource for professionals who want to use AI without needing a technical background. It provides skills training, guidance on how to integrate AI into daily work and tailored support for organisations adopting these tools.
Training is a core part of its activities. Meska AI offers certifications and courses built around hands-on use of co-pilots and other AI applications, with an emphasis on real-world workflows. Alongside online and in-person classes, the company runs events and retreats that mix learning with networking.
Meska AI also advises organisations on how to build an AI strategy, choose the right tools and set internal rules for their use.
Outside Meska AI, Khalifa is Investment Director at ZeroCarb LYFE, a U.S. restaurant business. He is also co-founder and CEO of Sigma Fit, a fashion company. His entrepreneurial work began in 2015 with Menidy, an e-commerce platform for Egyptian handicrafts, and continued in 2016 with Hive Analytics, a performance-marketing agency.
Khalifa graduated in 2013 from the Institute of Aviation Engineering and Technology in Egypt with a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering. He worked between 2014 and 2015 as a measurement engineer for drilling operations at Schlumberger, the U.S. energy-technology company.
Melchior Koba
He created a solution that integrates the entire automotive lifecycle onto a single platform. This brings a much-needed organizational structure to a market segment traditionally hampered by scattered and complex procedures.
Younes Benboujida, a Moroccan entrepreneur with a background in finance, is the founder and co-CEO of Autocash, a 2024 startup that helps users buy, sell and finance used cars.
Autocash combines three services: the sale of certified pre-owned vehicles, support for sellers looking to resell their cars and assistance with securing financing, including for vehicles found on other platforms. The company handles the full process from vehicle choice to final handover.
Its listings feature cars vetted by professional inspectors before being posted, ranging from small city models to SUVs. Each listing includes year, mileage, transmission type, fuel type and price in dirhams.
For sellers, Autocash conducts an inspection, issues a detailed report, provides an estimate of the car’s market value and can obtain an immediate purchase offer through a partner. For buyers seeking credit, the platform helps arrange financing and manages the administrative steps of the loan application.
Benboujida has held several senior roles in the financial sector. He is a Managing Partner at B6 Capital, a Moroccan venture capital and private equity firm. He holds a postgraduate degree in accounting and financial management from Montesquieu University Bordeaux-IV. He began his career in 1998 as a director at PwC France, became Deputy General Manager of Société Générale in Morocco in 2004 and was appointed General Manager of EQDOM, a Moroccan consumer credit company, in 2018.
Melchior Koba
In Ghana, Soko Job has launched an AI-powered recruitment platform designed to assist job seekers in their search and help employers find qualified candidates.
Soko Job, a digital hiring tool built by the Ghanaian startup of the same name and led by Roberta Mensah, has launched an AI-based platform designed to speed up recruitment for employers and make it easier for candidates to find jobs. The platform was first introduced in 2024.
“We built SokoJob because we believe that finding a job or talent shouldn’t be a lengthy and painful process. Our goal is to become a catalyst for economic opportunity in Ghana by enabling fast and accurate matching of talent with opportunities,” Roberta Mensah told Disrupt Africa.
Available through its website, Soko Job lets applicants create profiles, upload their CVs or enter their information directly. An AI engine reviews the data to deliver personalized suggestions and highlight openings that match a user’s skills and goals.
The service also offers automated tools for employers. In addition to posting vacancies, companies can use AI-generated pre-screening questions to filter applicants. An Applicant Tracking System (ATS) built into the platform’s messaging interface allows recruiters to handle the hiring process end-to-end, from receiving applications to evaluating candidates.
In its pilot phase, Soko Job helped several Ghanaian firms fill technical and operational roles. The company says it prioritizes user privacy by keeping personal information confidential unless candidates choose to share it. Only verified employers can publish job ads or invite applicants to apply.
Adoni Conrad Quenum
Smart Africa signed a series of cooperation agreements on Thursday at the Transform Africa Summit (TAS) 2025 in Conakry. The deals include several memoranda of understanding and a contract with public and private partners aimed at advancing the continent’s digital transformation. The agreements focus on youth, digital skills, financial inclusion, data exchange, internet domain management and women’s leadership, with the longer-term goal of building African digital sovereignty and a Digital Single Market by 2030.
Digital payments and data exchange
Smart Africa signed an MoU with Visa to promote digital services and electronic payments as a driver of economic development. The agreement, signed by Smart Africa CEO Lacina Koné and Mina Abdo, Visa’s Head of Partnerships for Sub-Saharan Africa, covers the digitisation of public services, expansion of payment infrastructure, financial inclusion, support for e-commerce, and measures to facilitate trade and entrepreneurship across member countries. The parties say the aim is to strengthen Africa’s digital economy and support plans for a Digital Single Market by making electronic transactions easier within and between states.
Smart Africa also signed a contract with Ascend Digital Solutions to pilot the Smart Africa Data Exchange (SADX) platform. The system is intended to provide a secure, interoperable data exchange framework based on open standards. It is designed to support cross-border digital services, digital identity verification and data sharing between states. A pilot will be rolled out in Benin, Ghana and Rwanda under the Smart Africa Trust Alliance (SATA) initiative, as a first step toward wider deployment of cross-border digital services.
Youth, skills and internet governance
An MoU between Smart Africa and YouthConnekt Africa aims to support youth-led digital transformation. The two organisations plan to use existing Smart Africa Youth Chapters and YouthConnekt Country Chapters to connect young innovators, promote mentoring and entrepreneurship and highlight African digital solutions. They also intend to run joint programmes during major events, including TAS and the YouthConnekt Africa Summit, to give more visibility to youth initiatives.
To address digital skills gaps, Smart Africa signed an MoU with the government of Gambia on the deployment of the Smart Africa Digital Academy (SADA) in the country. The partnership will organise and coordinate digital training programmes for public decision-makers, young people, women and civil servants, in line with Gambia’s digital transformation priorities. The goal is to put in place long-term mechanisms for continuous training supported by national infrastructure.
Smart Africa also signed an MoU with the Africa Top Level Domains Organisation (AFTLD) to strengthen management of critical internet resources. The agreement covers capacity building on country-code top-level domain (ccTLD) management, work on policy alignment and measures to reinforce cybersecurity related to domain name systems. It also seeks to present a more unified African position in global internet governance forums.
In addition, an MoU with Women Political Leaders is intended to place gender considerations at the centre of digital policy. The partnership aims to promote a gender-sensitive digital transition, support women’s leadership in the digital sector, back women’s digital entrepreneurship and increase women’s influence in digital policy and governance.
Smart Africa says the deals signed at TAS 2025 are meant to deepen cooperation between governments, the private sector and international organisations around the alliance’s digital agenda. The next step will be turning the commitments into concrete projects in member states.
Muriel EDJO
On the sidelines of the Transform Africa Summit (TAS) 2025 in Conakry, the Guinean government launched the third pillar of its Simandou 2040 program on Thursday, November 13. This new phase focuses on strengthening transportation, improving digital connectivity, and broadening access to essential services.
The pillar aims to position digital technologies as a key driver of national competitiveness. The objective extends beyond merely adopting digital tools to building a sovereign technological foundation: reinforced infrastructure, an updated regulatory framework, and redesigned public services intended to support growth, administrative efficiency, and inclusion.
The launch follows a period during which Guinea multiplied structural projects in the digital sector. The country established a Tier III Data Center for local hosting of public data, thereby strengthening its technological autonomy. Furthermore, the national.GN domain name was restored, signaling a commitment to consolidating the country's digital identity. These efforts include the progressive digitalization of the administration, with solutions such as FUGAS for public employee management and TELEMO, the public procurement platform launched on November 12 through collaboration with Rwanda.
In terms of infrastructure, Guinea has significantly expanded its connectivity capacity, deploying over 12,000 kilometers of fiber optic cable across the territory. The country is also investing in digital skills development through the creation of Digital Spaces, training programs, and school inclusion initiatives, including the GIGA project which has already connected more than 500 educational institutions. The design of a national technology park and a recent ecosystem assessment for artificial intelligence, conducted with the UNDP, are contributing to the elaboration of a national AI strategy.
The launch of Simandou 2040’s Third Pillar is expected to mark a new stage in structuring the overall project and developing a cohesive digital ecosystem. By combining infrastructure, modernizing public services, and strengthening skills, the initiative is positioned to reinforce Guinea's technological sovereignty, stimulate economic attractiveness, and prepare its youth for emerging digital careers.
Samira Njoya
Côte d’Ivoire wants to draw on Algeria’s experience in the postal, telecoms and ICT sectors, the Algerian government said. The announcement followed a November 13 meeting between Post and Telecommunications Minister Sid Ali Zerrouki and Ivorian Ambassador Alphonse Voho Sahi.
In a statement posted on its Facebook page, the Algerian ministry did not provide specific details on concrete bilateral cooperation projects or the exact areas in which Algeria would share its expertise. However, both parties discussed investment and partnership opportunities between Algerian and Ivorian companies.
The talks come as Côte d’Ivoire expands its digital sector to support economic growth. The World Bank says digital activities could add 6 to 7 percentage points to the country’s growth rate. The sector’s contribution, estimated at 5.5 billion dollars by 2025, could rise to 20 billion dollars by 2050 if investment and reforms continue.
Algeria ranks 116th on the UN’s 2024 E-Government Development Index with a score of 0.5956, above the African average but below the global average. It is also classified in Tier 3 of the International Telecommunication Union’s Global ICT Index. The country scored 86.1 out of 100 on the 2025 ICT Development Index, up from 80.9 in 2024, and placed sixth among 47 African countries, according to Ecofin Agency. In 2023, its 2G, 3G and 4G coverage reached 98.5%, 98.2% and 90.4%. Mobile penetration stood at 93% and internet penetration at 76.9%.
Côte d’Ivoire ranks 124th on the EGDI with a score of 0.5587 and is also listed in Tier 3 of the Global Cybersecurity Index. The ITU highlights the country’s strengths in legislation and institutional organisation but says technical capacity, training and cooperation need improvement. Côte d’Ivoire scored 69.5 on the 2025 ICT Development Index, up from 65.3 a year earlier. In 2023, 2G coverage reached 98.9%, 3G covered 98.3% and 4G reached 93.7%. Mobile penetration was 66.5% and internet penetration 40.7%.
Isaac K. Kassouwi
The Scale32 initiative, run by the Enovation Factory incubator and the UN Development Programme (UNDP) in Cameroon, has opened applications.
The programme provides both incubation to help entrepreneurs develop their business ideas and an acceleration phase to support early-stage companies in strengthening their business models and scaling up. Entrepreneurs and startups can apply online.
Government officials, development partners and private-sector actors will meet in Cotonou on Nov. 17-18 for a regional summit on digital transformation in West and Central Africa.
Organized by the Beninese government and the World Bank, the event will focus on narrowing the digital divide, building artificial intelligence skills and expanding digital job opportunities. It is expected to end with a “Cotonou Declaration” calling for a more inclusive regional digital market.
The Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) has given digital lending operators in Nigeria until January 5, 2026 to meet new regulatory requirements for digital credit services.
Platforms must submit their applications and follow strict rules on transparency, data protection and ethical debt recovery. The FCCPC said non-compliance could lead to penalties, including suspension of operations and fines.