Kenya’s Cabinet Secretary for Information, Communications, and the Digital Economy, William Kabogo Gitau, and Denmark’s Ambassador to Kenya, Stephan Schønemann, signed a memorandum of understanding on November 6 in Nairobi to strengthen bilateral cooperation in the digital sector. The agreement covers public service modernization, knowledge exchange, and citizen-centered digital service development.
“This strategic collaboration will create joint opportunities in areas such as digital public infrastructure, interoperability frameworks, capacity building, policy dialogue, knowledge exchange, and expert forums between our two nations,” William Kabogo said on X.
Kenya has emerged in recent years as one of Africa’s most dynamic digital hubs. Through its Digital Master Plan 2022–2032, the country aims to deploy 1,450 community digital centers and digitize all public services. These initiatives have already improved its e-governance ranking. According to the United Nations’ 2024 E-Government Development Index, Kenya scored 0.6314 out of 1, ranking 109th out of 193 countries.
Denmark, meanwhile, leads the same index with a score of 0.9847, confirming its global leadership in digital governance. Its 2022–2026 national digital strategy focuses on cybersecurity, data interoperability, and improving state-citizen relations through unified, inclusive platforms.
This new agreement follows an initial memorandum of understanding signed in March, focused on cooperation in higher education, research, and innovation. It reflects the growing strategic partnership between Nairobi and Copenhagen around technology development and digital transformation.
The implementation of this new partnership is expected to benefit both countries, which are each pursuing global leadership in digital innovation. For Kenya, it should promote knowledge transfer, strengthen institutional capacity, and enhance public service performance. Denmark, for its part, gains an opportunity to showcase its expertise in digital governance and expand its technological cooperation with Africa through inclusive, sustainable partnerships.
He is working to formalize the relationship between brands and content creators in a social media-driven market. His efforts are part of Tunisia’s broader digital transformation.
Midox Mbarek Mohamed Salah, a Tunisian entrepreneur and digital strategist, is the founder and CEO of TAWA Digital Talents, a startup that connects content creators with brands to boost visibility.
Founded in 2020, TAWA Digital Talents launched the Content Factory platform, which links brands to a network of more than 9,000 creators for tailored content production. The system uses artificial intelligence to optimize campaign management, offering real-time monitoring and payment only for approved content.
The platform lets brands submit creative briefs and approve content in under 24 hours through an automated process. Brands pay only for the content they choose to keep, helping them optimize budgets and reduce risk. Performance is tracked in real time, with content optimized for social media formats such as TikTok and Instagram Reels.
Alongside his entrepreneurial work, Midox Mbarek Mohamed Salah is also a sports journalist for DAZN France. He holds a bachelor’s degree in applied computer science for management, earned in 2011 from the Arab University of Sciences in Tunis. He also completed a business program at the School of Digital Economy at the University of La Manouba between 2020 and 2021.
His professional experience includes working as a digital project manager at the marketing firm Streamerz from 2011. In 2014, he joined Digidox Marketing Consulting as a digital marketing consultant. From 2021 to 2022, he worked as a digital transformation advisor for the Espérance Sportive de Tunis football club.
Melchior Koba
Tackling the digital sector's biggest challenge, which is the lack of practical skills, he employs active learning to guide the telecom industry's transformation.
Algerian entrepreneur and telecommunications specialist Samir Tahraoui is the co-founder and CEO of LabLabee, an educational technology company that aims to close the practical skills gap in the telecom and digital sectors.
Founded in 2021, LabLabee designed a hands-on training platform to support telecom teams in learning and upskilling. It offers a framework for users to train, experiment, and certify their expertise using real-world scenarios. Each learning path includes comprehensive follow-up, ranging from initial assessment to daily on-the-job assistance.
The solution caters to both technical roles, such as engineers, architects, and developers, and non-technical profiles, including team managers. The platform facilitates learning through tangible tools and structured guidance. By integrating artificial intelligence, the platform assists in searching for telecom standards, vendor documents, and internal corporate knowledge with a high degree of precision.
Focus on Next-Generation Telecoms
LabLabee's content covers key areas of sectoral transformation, including cloud-native environments, 5G, network automation, and other core technologies. Users access concrete use cases that bridge theory and practice. LabLabee also offers "Learning Labs," which are immersive virtual environments promoting active learning from discovery through to certification.
Tahraoui is a graduate of the IMT Atlantique engineering school in France, where he earned a master’s degree in computer networks and telecommunications in 2017.
His professional background includes stints at major telecom players. In 2016, he worked as a network engineer at Nokia. The following year, he joined Capgemini as a telecom cloud consultant. He then spent three years as a telecom network engineer at Orange in France before moving to Mavenir, a U.S. communications technology company, in 2020. At Mavenir, he served as the technical lead for the Europe, Middle East, and Africa region until founding LabLabee.
Melchior Koba
Egypt, GIZ, and tech firms launch ServiceNow training initiative
Program targets youth digital upskilling for local, global job markets
Part of broader MCIT strategy to build national digital workforce
Egypt’s Information Technology Institute (ITI) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the German Agency for International Cooperation (GIZ) on Wednesday, Nov. 5. The agreement also involves several multinationals, including Capgemini, Deloitte Innovation Hub (DIH), and Vodafone Intelligent Solutions (VOIS).
The partnership aims to launch a national initiative to train young talent on the ServiceNow platform, enhancing their technical skills for both local and international job markets.
Described by Egypt’s Ministry of Communications and Information Technology (MCIT) as the “first of its kind in Egypt,” the initiative offers internationally recognized training on ServiceNow, a digital transformation platform used by organizations to manage IT, HR, and operational services. The platform improves efficiency, streamlines workflows, and cuts costs by integrating systems into a unified digital environment.
Under the agreement, Capgemini, DIH, and VOIS will help select top graduates, provide technical and advisory support to align training with market needs, and recruit top performers. GIZ Egypt will provide international licenses and certified training materials, while ITI will design and implement specialized training programs based on the latest technology curricula.
Digital Workforce Strategy
Developing digital skills is a core pillar of Egypt’s national digital transformation strategy. The MCIT stresses that a “digital society cannot be built without the right level of expertise and sufficient human resources to carry out this mission.”
The ministry’s strategy focuses on four key areas: digital literacy, intermediate technology training, advanced programs to train a new generation of competitive technicians, and a professional master’s degree program offered annually through the Digital Egypt Builders Initiative (DEBI), implemented in partnership with global technology firms and international universities.
In related efforts, the MCIT signed an MoU with Microsoft in April to train and certify 100,000 people, including young professionals and IT staff from ministries and digital transformation units. A similar five-year agreement was concluded with IBM. In February, the ministry also signed an MoU with Cisco to improve the digital skills of about 250,000 trainees over the next five years.
Isaac K. Kassouwi
Gozem launches Brazzaville operations, expanding across Francophone Africa
App offers green taxis, rentals, and digital tools for drivers
Entry follows Yango’s exit, targets mobility formalization and fintech growth
Pan-African super app Gozem officially launched its operations in Brazzaville on Wednesday, Nov. 5, marking a key step in its expansion strategy across Francophone Africa. Already operating in Togo, Benin, Gabon, and Cameroon, the application now seeks to address the mobility needs of the Congolese population with its digital model.
Brazzaville residents can now use the mobile application to book various types of transport, including geo-localized "green" taxis, high-end air-conditioned vehicles, and hourly rentals. Gozem emphasizes a social impact model: its partner drivers, designated "Champions," gain access to new revenue streams and digital tools, including geolocation, traceability, and digital payment options.
Capitalizing on Market Opportunity
The launch comes as the digitalization of mobility services in Congo-Brazzaville is still nascent, but meets a growing demand for efficiency, safety, and modernization. Gozem is well-resourced to fund its growth, strengthen its vehicle fleet, and activate new financial and logistics services, thanks to a $30 million Series B funding round, combining equity and debt, orchestrated by investors including SAS Shipping Agencies Services Sàrl (a subsidiary of the MSC Group) and Al Mada Ventures.
Gozem enters the market at an opportune time. The Yango application, which launched in Brazzaville several years ago, has ceased operations, leaving a void in the structured digital transport market in the Congolese capital. This lack of a major digital player offers Gozem a significant chance to establish itself as a leader, provided it successfully adapts its offerings to local specificities.
The company must navigate notable challenges, including the adoption of the new model by informal drivers, adherence to local regulations, user sensitization, and establishing reliable, high-quality service.
Gozem’s entry into Brazzaville could yield several positive results: improved quality and traceability of trips via geolocation and cashless payments, new economic opportunities for partner drivers, the gradual formalization of the informal mobility sector, and a catalytic effect on the local digital ecosystem.
Beyond mobility, this expansion reflects Gozem’s ambition to evolve into an "African Super App," progressively integrating delivery, mobile payment, and FinTech services, thereby contributing to the region's economic and digital dynamism.
Samira Njoya
Nigeria launches upgraded NgREN to connect higher education institutions
New platform supports online learning, research, and digital services
Full national rollout planned by 2026 under digital education strategy
Nigeria’s Federal Ministry of Education recently announced the rollout of an upgraded version of the Nigerian Research and Education Network (NgREN) and its integration with the Tertiary Education, Research, Applications and Services (TERAS) platform.
Officials said the initiative aims to boost digital connectivity, research collaboration, and innovation across the country’s higher education system.
Education Minister Alausa said the new NgREN will serve as a national high-speed education network, linking universities, research institutes, polytechnics, and colleges of education through a shared digital platform. The system will support online learning, cloud computing, plagiarism detection, digital libraries, research services, high-performance computing, and institutional analytics.
Digital Transformation Goals
The minister said the pilot phase will begin in 2025 in selected universities, polytechnics, and colleges of education across the country’s geopolitical zones. Nigeria plans to connect all higher education institutions by 2026.
This initiative is part of a broader digital transformation drive for Nigeria’s education sector. For instance, on October 30, Alausa unveiled a national program to distribute tablets in all public schools to make digital education universal by 2027. In September, the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) signed an agreement with U.S. firm Digital Learning Network (DLN) to supply digital devices to nearly 47 million students and teachers nationwide.
Isaac K. Kassouwi
He designs tools tailored for the local audience by focusing on streaming and digital management, illustrating a practical, everyday application of digital technology.
Charles Maleshila, an entrepreneur and computer scientist from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), has launched Plustube, a streaming platform created to give Congolese audiences a local alternative to international services like Netflix and Canal+.
Launched in 2024, Plustube offers a streaming service featuring both international and original content. It targets film and series enthusiasts with a multilingual interface, showing ambitions for international expansion.
Plustube emphasizes personalized user experience, letting viewers choose content that matches their preferences. Designed for users aged 18 and above, the platform includes an advanced search tool to sort videos by rating, release date, or country of origin.
Maleshila has also founded other digital ventures. In 2020, he launched Plustune, a platform for discovering, sharing, and streaming music and videos. The following year, he introduced Kookin, a digital tool for restaurants to simplify operations. The app lets restaurants create a professional page and manage menus, staff, delivery partners, and payments.
Maleshila earned a bachelor’s degree in Information Technology from Stratford University in India in 2018. He also trained in programming and web design at Aptech Learning and NIIT Pune, two Indian tech institutes.
Melchior Koba
He aims to establish Alissa IA as a key player in African automation. His startup designs localized solutions to meet the communication and management challenges faced by institutions across the continent.
Gabonese entrepreneur and developer Samuel Nkenke Eyebe is working to establish his company, Alissa IA, as a key player in Africa’s automation sector by developing virtual agents and chatbots for public and private institutions across the continent.
Founded in 2024, Alissa IA creates conversational solutions and AI tools tailored for government agencies, ministries, businesses, and the general public. The company combines technological development with support services, including training and awareness programs focused on the use of AI in Africa. Its goal is to respond to communication and assistance needs through automation and machine learning.
The company designs custom chatbots for support, information, and user interaction. It also builds AI tools for various sectors to improve internal processes and strengthen the connection between institutions and citizens. Its solutions include tools that accelerate content production, from idea to final text.
In addition to product development, Alissa IA organizes training and awareness initiatives focused on artificial intelligence, aiming to promote digital upskilling and access to technology careers.
Samuel Nkenke Eyebe graduated from Omar Bongo University in 2022 with a bachelor's degree in business law, and earned a higher technical certificate in software engineering from Simplon Roanne in France the same year.
He began his professional career in 2021 as a software developer at Ogooué Labs, a Gabonese startup incubator, where he worked until 2024. Between 2023 and 2024, he also served as an IT development trainer at Ecole 241 Business, an institution focused on digital careers.
In February 2025, Nkenke Eyebe won first prize in the web and mobile development category at the Gabon National Crafts Competition. That same year, he participated in the Osiane conference, a major digital event in Central Africa, as well as in VivaTech in France, an international event focused on innovation and technology startups.
Melchior Koba
He is among the entrepreneurs redefining African technology, offering an innovation that directly addresses challenges in complexity and decision-making.
South African technology executive Ryno Goosen is leading the expansion of his firm, Locstat, after the artificial intelligence (AI) company secured a significant funding round.
Goosen, co-founder, CEO, and CTO of Locstat, announced in late October 2025 that the company had raised $2.9 million in a pre-Series A funding round from the Portugal Gateway Fund and ANZA Capital.
The capital will fund the commercialization of Locstat's technology in new markets. "This investment allows us to rapidly commercialize locally developed South African technology, proven in some of the most complex transactional environments on the continent," Goosen said.
Established in 2016, Locstat develops a “graph intelligence” platform that helps organizations identify real-time risks and opportunities to improve decision speed and relevance. The company converts graph-oriented databases, which dynamically link data elements, into a comprehensive solution combining data, analytics, and AI to solve complex, large-scale problems.
At the core of Locstat's offering is LightWeaver, a platform optimized for rapid deployment and precise performance measurement. It is designed to reduce the cost and complexity associated with internal development while delivering reliable performance metrics.
Locstat’s applications span several areas, including fraud and risk detection in dense transaction networks, asset tracking, and real-time geospatial analytics for operations and logistics. The tool also enables businesses to analyze relationships between customers, partners, and behaviors over time.
In addition to his role at Locstat, Goosen heads Suritec, a South African company founded in 2001 that specializes in analytics, content management, geographical intelligence, system integration, and consulting.
Goosen holds a Master's degree in Information and Knowledge Management from Stellenbosch University, which he obtained in 2014.
Melchior Koba
By offering a digital alternative in a predominantly manual sector, he streamlines money exchanges for informal economy participants.
South African entrepreneur Kosta Scholiadis, founder and CEO of fintech startup Street Wallet, is expanding the company’s digital payment services to better serve the country’s large informal economy.
Founded in 2021, Street Wallet provides a platform that simplifies daily transactions for small businesses. It enables users to accept payments, send funds, and receive disbursements without needing technical expertise, helping small traders manage cash flow and operate more efficiently.
The solution is aimed at street vendors, parking attendants, corner shops, and multi-site businesses looking to streamline collections and build customer loyalty. Payments are made using QR codes, accessible to both merchants and customers. Street Wallet ensures next-day access to funds, improving financial reliability for its users.
In August 2025, the company raised $350,000 to support its expansion from Cape Town and Durban into Johannesburg by year’s end. A month later, Street Wallet acquired Digitip, a digital tipping platform for informal workers.
Scholiadis holds a bachelor's degree in financial modeling and asset valuation from the University of Cape Town (2022). He previously founded Sportnet, a pan-African football database focused on scouting young talent, and in 2016 launched Total Football Academy, a development center for young football players in South Africa.
Before starting Street Wallet, he worked as a data analyst at eGaming SA (2019-2020) and served as head coach for third-division club Goal50 United FC. From November 2021 to July 2025, he was a product manager at AirPortr, a London-based tech company specializing in airline baggage logistics.
Melchior Koba
UNDP, Orange Liberia sign MoU to boost youth digital skills
Program targets rural connectivity, training, and tech entrepreneurship
Orange pledges $200M to expand network, support digital growth
The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and Orange Liberia signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2025, to promote digital inclusion and build digital skills among Liberia’s youth.
The collaboration combines the resources and expertise of both institutions to expand opportunities for digital training and tech entrepreneurship. The initiative will include training programs, mentorship, and startup support to build a more inclusive and sustainable digital ecosystem in Liberia.
Specific goals include fostering innovation, improving digital literacy, and expanding connectivity in rural areas.
Part of Liberia’s Digital Transformation Push
The partnership aligns with Liberia’s national digital transformation agenda, as the government seeks to leverage technology for economic growth and broader access. The private sector is also playing a key role in this effort.
Orange Liberia announced a $200 million investment plan this year to strengthen its network and improve service quality, particularly in underserved rural regions. The financial commitment underscores Orange’s efforts to expand connectivity and narrow the digital divide.
The agreement with UNDP builds on Orange’s previous initiatives in Liberia. In October 2020, the company opened the Orange Digital Center in Monrovia, a technology hub for youth training, innovation, and digital entrepreneurship. The new partnership extends that cooperation nationwide, with a focus on rural communities and local startups.
By focusing on youth and connectivity, the initiative aims to stimulate Liberia’s digital economy by creating jobs, supporting local businesses, and nurturing a generation of digital talent capable of leading the country’s technological transformation.
Samira Njoya
Senegal’s Digital Technology Park (PTN), designed as a major hub for innovation in Diamniadio, will become operational by March 2026, Minister of Communication, Telecommunications, and Digital Affairs Alioune Sall announced on November 3, 2025 during a working visit marking the official restart of construction.
Covering 12.5 hectares in its first phase, the PTN is set to become an integrated digital city hosting three towers for tech companies, a research and innovation center, a start-up incubator, an audiovisual production facility, and a training center to enhance local digital skills. The minister stressed the importance of adhering to the construction timeline and tasked the Operational Coordination and Monitoring Office (BOCS) with ensuring rigorous supervision of the project’s progress.
Initially launched under the “Digital Senegal 2025” program, the project was delayed due to technical and administrative hurdles. Its relaunch now falls under the New Technological Deal, a national strategy aimed at accelerating digital transformation, creating 150,000 direct jobs, and supporting over 500 start-ups by 2034, according to the Ministry of Digital Affairs.
Located near Diamniadio’s urban hub and key national infrastructure, the PTN forms part of Senegal’s broader effort to promote balanced territorial development.
Through this initiative, the government seeks to build a vibrant digital ecosystem centered on research, innovation, and training, while fostering collaboration among public, private, and academic stakeholders. The park is also expected to attract foreign investment in emerging technologies and strengthen Senegal’s competitiveness in the regional digital economy.
Omar Maher is co-founder and CEO of enterprise AI firm Monta AI.
The company designs LLM- and RAG-based tools to enhance corporate efficiency.
Its products include multilingual assistants and AI agents for complex automation.
Egyptian artificial intelligence expert and entrepreneur Omar Maher is the co-founder and CEO of Monta AI, a company specializing in enterprise AI solutions.
Founded in 2024, Monta AI develops advanced systems that help companies improve performance through artificial intelligence. The firm builds tools based on large language models (LLMs) and retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) to drive measurable business growth.
The startup offers an AI assistant capable of processing sensitive corporate data in multilingual environments, including Arabic, and under strict local regulations. It also provides voice solutions for digital assistants and contact centers, designed to handle complex contexts.
Monta AI is also developing “Custom Agentic Solutions,” AI-driven agents that can reason, plan, and act to achieve defined goals. These agents integrate with a company’s internal tools, automate complex workflows, and deliver measurable outcomes. The firm also provides AI consulting, supporting organizations from initial assessment to implementation and optimization.
Before founding Monta AI, Maher co-founded Trustious in 2012, a platform that helped consumers make informed purchasing decisions through reliable product and service reviews. In 2014, he launched Homna.com, an online furniture marketplace in Egypt.
He holds a degree in business informatics from the German University in Cairo (2009). In 2015, he joined ITWORX, an Egyptian firm specializing in AI, digital transformation, and cloud solutions, where he served as product director and later as global head of advanced analytics and big data development.
From 2016 to 2022, Maher worked at Esri, a global provider of geographic information and geospatial intelligence software, where he held roles including business development manager, AI and machine learning practice lead, and director of AI. Between 2022 and 2023, he served as product marketing director at Parallel Domain, a company specializing in AI data generation.
Moncef Chlouchi is the founder and CEO of Inyad, a digital solutions startup.
The platform helps shop owners and freelancers manage sales, payments, and operations.
Inyad has raised $14 million to expand across North Africa and the Middle East.
Moroccan engineer and entrepreneur Moncef Chlouchi is the founder and CEO of Inyad, a startup that supports the digital transformation of small retailers and independent workers across North Africa and the Middle East.
Founded in 2018, Inyad develops a unified platform for professionals in commerce, hospitality, and services, allowing them to centralize the management of sales, payments, and daily operations. The company says it is designed for “those who keep the economy running every day.”
The platform offers tools for invoicing, payment processing, payroll management, and inventory tracking. Restaurant owners can use it to manage orders, payments, and staff schedules, while shopkeepers can digitize daily operations, including real-time stock and attendance tracking.
Inyad also provides a digital credit ledger that records customer debts and repayments, along with a mobile touchscreen cash register. The company has raised $14 million in funding to date.
Chlouchi holds a master’s degree in applied mathematics from École Polytechnique (2012) and another in mining engineering from Mines Paris – PSL (2013). He began his career in 2013 as a supply and commercial strategy analyst at Total Oil Asia Pacific Marketing & Services in Singapore, before joining McKinsey & Company as a project manager from 2014 to 2017.