African payments technology company Flutterwave has announced it has secured 20 new Money Transmitter Licenses (MTLs) across the United States, significantly expanding its ability to offer faster and more reliable cross-border payment services.

The newly acquired licenses mean customers across more U.S. states and territories can now send money more easily and securely to countries including Nigeria, Ghana, Egypt, and Cameroon.

The new licenses reinforce the company’s mission to simplify international payments and strengthen economic ties between the U.S. and Africa.

Posted On vendredi, 04 juillet 2025 15:24 Written by

African payments company Onafriq launched its new cross-border payment service on July 3 in Accra. This ushers in a transformative way for individuals and businesses to move money seamlessly across African borders.

The new service directly connects banks, fintechs, and mobile money operators, enabling instant transfers from Ghanaian mobile wallets to Nigerian bank accounts and wallets. This integration allows traders to settle cross-border transactions more efficiently, families to remit money to loved ones, and businesses to streamline payments to suppliers and employees.

The service launch marks a significant step toward reducing reliance on costly and slow traditional remittance channels, making it easier for millions of Africans to participate in regional economic activities.

Posted On vendredi, 04 juillet 2025 14:40 Written by

Liquify, an invoice financing platform for SMEs, has officially announced the close of its oversubscribed $1.5 million seed round aimed at accelerating its expansion across Sub-Saharan Africa.

The round was led by Future Africa, with participation from Launch Africa Ventures, 54 Collective, and Equitable Ventures, along with a group of strategic angel investors. Emerald Africa also extended its debt facility, strengthening Liquify’s liquidity and enabling greater flexibility to support its expanding SME customer base.

With this fresh capital, Liquify plans to scale operations in its Ghanaian hub by hiring across product, technology, and customer success teams. The company will also expand into both Anglophone and Francophone markets, extending its reach to serve more SME exporters across the region.

Posted On vendredi, 04 juillet 2025 14:11 Written by

Mohamed Benmansour, a Moroccan technology entrepreneur, creates digital tools to simplify business operations and improve everyday life in Africa. He founded Nuitée Travel in 2017, an online platform that helps travel agencies and airlines book hotel rooms for their clients through a direct connection to hotels.

“Our infrastructure allows developers to seamlessly integrate hotel booking features, simplify integration, and unlock unlimited possibilities,” Benmansour says. His API-based system links hotels to travel agencies, letting partners customize their own booking interfaces, control pricing, and manage their audience.

Nuitée Travel aggregates offers from 2.2 million properties worldwide, including hotel chains, independent hotels, global distribution systems, and channel managers. Through modular APIs and white-label solutions, it enables businesses to keep full control over their brand while offering a streamlined booking experience.

Benmansour’s entrepreneurial journey began with Safarclick Travel Group, an online travel agency he founded in 2009. A year later, he co-founded Superdeal.ma, a Moroccan group-buying site. In 2013, he launched Ticket.ma, an online ticketing service. In 2014, he introduced Binga, a digital payment platform that lets businesses and government offices accept cash payments at local points of sale.

Before starting his ventures, Benmansour earned a master’s degree in electrical engineering from the Rochester Institute of Technology in 2004. He then worked as an application engineer at Silicon Laboratories in the U.S. that same year, before joining Kawasaki Microelectronics as a senior analog design engineer until 2009.

Melchior Koba

 

Posted On vendredi, 04 juillet 2025 13:34 Written by

A trained veterinarian, she shifts her career toward real estate with a digital solution aimed at transforming industry practices.

Souhila Merraouche, an Algerian entrepreneur and executive, is recognized for her commitment to the digital transformation of the real estate sector. She is the founder and CEO of Krello, a startup that develops innovative solutions to digitize and streamline property management.

Founded in 2022, Krello is a digital platform revolutionizing how individuals and professionals access the real estate market. Available on mobile and web, it connects buyers, sellers, renters, and real estate agents within a comprehensive, secure, and transparent ecosystem. The platform covers rentals, sales, property exchanges, and the promotion of real estate services.

The application allows property owners and agents to manage and publish their listings, while renters and buyers can search for properties based on specific criteria. An automatic matching algorithm links user needs with available listings, simplifying the search process and speeding up access to properties.

Krello includes a messaging service for user communication, an ad management module to enhance listing visibility, and dedicated customer support. The platform enables filtered searches by location, budget, property type, or duration, as well as online booking, service reviews, and public or private sharing of listings.

Souhila Merraouche earned a doctorate in veterinary medicine in 2009 from Hadj Lakhdar University of Batna. She also obtained a bachelor's degree in industrial and organizational psychology in 2023 from the University of Algiers 2. Her career began in 2009 at BCCM, a French manufacturer of crushers and grinders, where she worked as a marketing analyst in Algeria.

In 2010, she opened the Merraouche veterinary clinic, which she managed until 2018. Between 2016 and 2022, she served as a director in Algeria for Unicity International, a U.S.-based company specializing in nutritional products.

Written in French by Melchior Koba,

Translated and adapted into English by Mouka Mezonlin

Posted On vendredi, 04 juillet 2025 05:52 Written by
  • “Siraj” service covers 1.2 million students with tools for attendance tracking and records access.

  • Part of a broader push to digitise education, including e-textbooks and diploma authentication.
  • Low internet penetration and device access remain key implementation challenges.

 

Mauritania has launched a new digital service enabling parents to monitor their children’s school attendance, academic records and learning materials, authorities said on Tuesday, July 1, as the country accelerates efforts to modernise its education system.

The platform, called “Siraj,” is accessible via the government’s digital portal “Khidmati” and serves about 1.2 million students nationwide. Parents can view required textbooks, track absences, check annual grade averages, request school transfers, and locate schools on an interactive map.

The initiative is part of a national digital education transformation strategy under development. Earlier this year, officials began designing a roadmap to digitise the sector, including plans to introduce digital diplomas and an online training platform for primary school teachers. In October 2024, the government announced the rollout of e-textbooks.

Authorities said Siraj is intended to strengthen family engagement in education, a factor linked to improved academic performance. A 2023 UNESCO report, Edtech And Parental Engagement, cited strong potential for educational technologies to help parents better support their children’s learning.

However, implementation faces hurdles. UNESCO’s research on similar initiatives in Kenya highlighted obstacles such as limited parental involvement, lack of digital skills, and inadequate infrastructure.

In Mauritania, internet access remains uneven: only 37.4% of the population was online in 2023, according to the International Telecommunication Union. Ensuring that parents have internet-capable devices and affordable connectivity will be critical to the programme’s success, officials said.

Posted On jeudi, 03 juillet 2025 17:19 Written by
  • MPs propose a West African pact for responsible AI and multilingual digital content.

  • Initiative aligns with ECOWAS Digital Strategy 2024–2029 and $10.5 mln World Bank project.
  • Region aims to equip 63% youth population with 21st-century digital skills.

 

Integrating digital technologies into African education systems is often presented as a panacea for the structural weaknesses of the sector. The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) wants to make it a strategic lever for its youth.

As part of efforts to modernise schools and train young people for the digital economy, West African lawmakers recommend drawing a regional pact for ethical and sovereign use of artificial intelligence in education.

Meeting since June 30 in Dakar, members of the ECOWAS Parliament’s joint committee on Education, Health, Culture, Telecommunications, and IT discussed accelerating the integration of technology into education systems across the region.

The proposed West African Pact would promote responsible AI, develop inclusive multilingual digital content, and strengthen teacher training through a regional EdTech lab network, officials said.

Lawmakers also called for expanded electricity and internet access in schools, a comprehensive mapping of digital platforms, support for homegrown innovation in universities, and deeper regional cooperation to share educational resources.

The discussions align with the ECOWAS Digital Strategy 2024–2029, adopted last October, which positions ICT and digital education as pillars for growth, inclusion, and regional autonomy.

Funding will partly come from the West Africa Regional Digital Integration Project (WARDIP), a $10.5 million World Bank programme aiming to improve connectivity and promote an integrated digital market.

Some member states, including Senegal and Nigeria, have already deployed online learning platforms and distributed tablets in rural communities. ECOWAS now plans to expand these efforts through transnational e-learning initiatives and a regional fund to narrow the educational digital divide.

With about 63% of the region’s population under 25, ECOWAS faces a demographic imperative to equip youth with relevant digital skills. The African Union estimates that $60 million will be needed over the next five years to finance large-scale digital education programmes across the continent.

Officials said the investments should not only improve employability and foster EdTech innovation but also reduce inequalities, enhance academic mobility, and bolster the region’s technological sovereignty.


This article was initially published in French by Samira Njoya

Edited in English by Ola Schad Akinocho

Posted On jeudi, 03 juillet 2025 16:26 Written by

Richard Nischk has built his career around new technologies and their impact on business-to-customer communication. Today, he leads the charge in transforming how companies engage with customers on social media.

Nischk, a South African entrepreneur, co-founded and now serves as CEO of Cue, a startup specializing in AI-powered customer service solutions.

Founded in 2015, Cue developed a platform that lets companies manage and automate customer interactions across WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, web chat, and Instagram—all from one unified interface. The platform aims to deliver fast, personalized, and efficient service while cutting response times and operational costs.

Cue’s technology integrates advanced chatbots and AI conversational agents. These tools handle routine requests, tailor responses, and adapt to each customer by analyzing conversations. The platform also provides detailed analytics to monitor every interaction, measure customer satisfaction, and boost support performance.

In 2024, Cue launched its AI Agents service—virtual assistants that understand natural language and learn from companies’ internal documents to offer more precise and autonomous support. Cue now serves hundreds of clients across South Africa and Europe. Its team of over 40 employees operates in 10 cities across 5 countries.

Before Cue, Nischk founded Forecast Raincoats in 2013 and co-managed it until 2023. The company produces and sells its own raincoat brand in South Africa.

Nischk earned a bachelor’s degree in social dynamics from Stellenbosch University in 2010. He also holds a postgraduate degree in business management from the University of Cape Town, obtained in 2013.

He started his career at Panacea Mobile, a communications tech company, managing accounts. In 2015, he joined Continuon, a smart marketing solutions firm, where he served as a non-executive director until 2021.

This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba

Edited in English by Ange Jason Quenum

 

Posted On jeudi, 03 juillet 2025 11:56 Written by

Senegal is ramping up partnerships to drive its digital transformation, and Visa is the latest global player to commit to this strategy. The move shows Senegal’s determination to modernize its financial system and boost digital inclusion.

On July 2, Minister of Communication, Telecommunications and Digital Economy Alioune Sall met with a Visa delegation led by Ismahill Diaby, Vice President and General Manager for West Africa, Francophone Central Africa, and Lusophone Africa. The meeting strengthened ties between Senegal and the global payments giant.

They discussed ways to improve Senegal’s digital payment infrastructure, digitize public services, and expand access to modern solutions like contactless and mobile payments. Both sides agreed to set up a joint working group to identify priority projects and launch pilot programs with strong economic and social benefits.

This partnership fits into Senegal’s New Technological Deal, an ambitious digital strategy launched in February 2025. The plan aims to establish Senegal as a hub of innovation in Africa.

Visa, active in Senegal since 2001, has partnered with banks, telecoms, fintechs, and government bodies to modernize payments and promote financial inclusion. The company wants to build on this work by helping digitize public payments and working with local startups to develop solutions suited to Senegal’s needs.

Through this agreement, Senegal hopes to tap into Visa’s technology to boost public revenues, reduce the informal economy, grow the digital sector, and strengthen financial sovereignty. These goals align with the New Technological Deal’s focus on modernizing public administration, developing a local digital economy, and upgrading payment systems.

Samira Njoya

 

Posted On jeudi, 03 juillet 2025 11:51 Written by
  • Morocco signed a $22 million deal with China’s Jungnong to boost precision farming

  • The project targets drought-hit semi-arid regions with smart irrigation and soil tech

  • A new training center will prepare local workers for high-tech agriculture jobs

Morocco is turning to agricultural technology as a tool to reinforce its food security in the face of climate challenges. Last week, the Moroccan Ministry of Agriculture signed a $22 million investment agreement with Jungnong, the Hong Kong-based subsidiary of China Agricultural Development Group.

The project aims to deploy precision farming technologies in Morocco’s semi-arid regions, which are especially vulnerable to drought and water management challenges.

The plan includes digital platforms for soil nutrition management, remote monitoring systems, and real-time optimization tools for crop irrigation and fertilization. According to simulations provided by Jungnong, these technologies could boost agricultural yields by more than 20% per hectare. However, experts stress that these projections must be validated through field trials and independent assessments.

Beyond technology deployment, the partnership will also establish a training center focused on smart farming. The goal is to train several hundred Moroccan workers in new agricultural technologies. This is particularly relevant in a sector where 70% of farms are family-run, according to Morocco’s Economic, Social, and Environmental Council.

The initiative is part of Morocco’s “Generation Green 2020–2030” strategy, which emphasizes digitalization and skills development as key drivers for transforming the rural economy. Agriculture Minister Ahmed El Bouari described the project as “an integrated development model combining technology with social impact.”

If successful, Morocco’s approach could serve as a model for other countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region that face similar challenges with productivity, water scarcity, and climate resilience. However, the project’s success will depend on Jungnong’s ability to adapt its solutions to local conditions, ensure effective skills transfer, and deliver measurable results in yields and food security.

Posted On jeudi, 03 juillet 2025 08:23 Written by
Page 1 sur 301

Please publish modules in offcanvas position.