• Ethiopia launches E-Tamirt platform to streamline industrial sourcing and sales

  • Tool supports supply-chain efficiency and boosts competitiveness under digital strategy

  • GSMA projects sizable economic gains as digitalization expands across sectors

Ethiopia’s Ministry of Industry, in partnership with state-owned Ethio Telecom, on Tuesday launched an e-commerce platform called E-Tamirt. The platform provides a centralized marketplace where manufacturers can source raw materials, connect with suppliers and sell their products to buyers in Ethiopia and regional markets.

According to Ethio Telecom, E-Tamirt will play a strategic role in strengthening the shift from retail-based trade to manufacturing and will help local products compete more effectively with imports.

Industry Minister Melaku Alebel said the platform helps ease supply and distribution bottlenecks by providing a unified digital channel for industrial transactions. He added that it supports national efforts to increase production capacity, foster innovation and improve long-term competitiveness.

The initiative is part of Ethiopia’s broader digital transformation agenda. In late November, the government adopted a new digital strategy running through 2030 to expand digital public services, modernize the economy and promote digital inclusion.

The GSMA estimates that Ethiopia’s digital transformation could add 319 billion birr, or nearly 2 billion dollars, to the economy by 2028, with major gains expected in agriculture, transport, health, public administration, trade and industry.

The industrial sector alone could generate 108 billion birr, create 180,000 jobs and add 9 billion birr in tax revenue. According to the GSMA, Ethiopia’s manufacturing activity is still heavily centered on agro-processing, but there is substantial potential for growth through diversification, higher industrial output, stronger investment in research and development and greater local processing and value creation. Digital technologies can also help the government raise manufacturing exports from 13 percent in 2019 to 48 percent by 2030.

Isaac K. Kassouwi

Posted On samedi, 06 décembre 2025 18:41 Written by
  • Burkina Faso enforces 2023 telecom rules, extending balances and boosting user rights
  • Consumers say measures still miss core demand for lower internet prices
  • Regulator reports price drops, though affordability remains far above ITU benchmark

Burkina Faso’s telecom regulator announced new consumer protection rules on Tuesday, but customers said the measures fall short of their main demand: lower internet prices.

The Regulatory Authority for Electronic Communications and Posts (ARCEP) said the rules, suspended since they were adopted in 2023, are now enforceable following a court ruling. The changes include extending the validity of users’ main account balances from 90 to 180 days, allowing promotional credits to be used across all networks, and giving customers a grace period to reclaim unused call credit and data. The regulator also set a minimum one-month validity for 1-GB data bundles.

Alongside lower prices, subscribers are calling for clearer improvements in service quality, slower data depletion, better usage-tracking tools, and new offers such as unlimited plans.

The rules were drafted after a consumer boycott movement in mid-April 2023 targeted operators Orange, Moov Africa and Telecel over high costs and poor service. Public frustration has persisted since then, often voiced on social media.

ARCEP says the new measures are “concrete, objective and operational,” and will help lower service costs and strengthen consumer protections. 

According to Executive Secretary Wendlassida Patrice Compaoré, the changes have already reduced the average prices of standard mobile internet plans from Orange Burkina Faso and ONATEL by between 28% and 45%, depending on plans with at least a one-month validity. Regulatory decisions regarding Orange Burkina Faso have also halved SMS prices to other national networks and forced operators to gradually make bonuses usable across all networks.

The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) reveals that monthly mobile internet spending in Burkina Faso amounted to 8.8% of GNI per capita in 2025. For a service to be considered affordable, this ratio must be below 2%. The African average is 5.32%, compared with 1.38% globally.

Isaac K. Kassouwi

Posted On samedi, 06 décembre 2025 18:23 Written by
  • Algeria launches phased 5G rollout after issuing licenses to three operators

  • Six-year plan starts with eight pilot provinces amid rising bandwidth demand

  • High deployment costs and device affordability pose challenges to nationwide adoption

Algerian authorities on Wednesday officially launched 5G services, calling it a key step in modernizing the country’s telecommunications sector. The move marks the beginning of a phased rollout intended to boost the digital economy.

Telecom operators can now install their first 5G sites and prepare offers for both consumers and businesses. The government plans a deployment that will take place over six years under a national plan calling for gradual and balanced coverage. Eight provinces will serve as pilot zones before the network is extended nationwide.

The launch follows the awarding of 5G licenses last July to Mobilis, Djezzy and Ooredoo, a decision confirmed in the Official Gazette on Nov. 24. The licensing terms detailing the technical, financial and coverage requirements were published at the same time. The licenses cost 63.9 billion dinars, or about 492 million dollars.

Authorities say the introduction of 5G marks a new stage in the country’s connectivity as demand for bandwidth grows rapidly. The technology is expected to support the expansion of artificial intelligence, the Internet of Things, cloud computing and other advanced services. Sectors such as health, industry, education and smart mobility are expected to benefit. Tests conducted by Mobilis in February 2025 reached speeds of up to 1.2 gigabits per second.

Several questions remain, including how extensive coverage will be. According to a 2022 study by Ericsson, the base cost of deploying 5G in any country ranges between 3 billion and 8 billion dollars, with an additional investment of 20 percent to 35 percent required to expand coverage. This raises concerns that deployment in Algeria could favor more profitable urban areas while leaving rural regions behind.

Affordability is another challenge. According to a 2022 report by the GSMA, 5G-compatible smartphones start at around 150 dollars from several manufacturers, a price still inaccessible for many African consumers, especially when upfront payment is required. The organization estimates that device financing programs will likely be needed to make these phones affordable and help drive 5G adoption.

Isaac K. Kassouwi

Posted On samedi, 06 décembre 2025 18:20 Written by

The fintech platform presents itself as ‘the professional account for the ambitious’ and provides essential tools for entrepreneurs.

Zazu is a digital fintech platform developed by a South African startup. It positions itself as an innovative financial management tool for African entrepreneurs, freelancers and small and medium-sized enterprises.

Users can open a business account in minutes from their smartphone, without visiting a bank, and access a range of tools to manage cash flow, invoicing, expenses and accounting. The Cape Town-based startup was founded in 2024 by Germain Bahri and Rinse Jacobs.

The platform includes features such as online account opening, invoice management, expense tracking, cash flow tools, instant payments and transfers, and payment cards. For entrepreneurs, this means bringing all financial operations together in a single digital interface without paperwork.

"Zazu is founded with the idea of making banking better for African founders and SMEs by providing them with a powerful bank account at the core, combined with invoicing, bookkeeping and cash flow management tools - making banking feel less like an obstacle and more like a catalyst for growth," the startup said.

For small businesses, freelancers and startups, Zazu automates routine administrative tasks. The company says this allows entrepreneurs to focus on growing their business instead of being bogged down by accounting paperwork.

By combining a business account, financial management and invoicing in one platform, the application aims to reduce administrative burdens and improve operational efficiency.

Zazu recently raised 1 million dollars in pre-seed funding to accelerate its rollout in South Africa and Morocco.

Adoni Conrad Quenum

Posted On samedi, 06 décembre 2025 18:16 Written by

In Kenya, E-tiba is emerging as a comprehensive digital solution to simplify access to home-based healthcare.

E-tiba is a digital health platform developed by a Kenyan startup. Through a mobile app, a website and a USSD code, the platform connects patients with qualified caregivers including nurses, nursing aides, therapists and support staff for one-off or regular home visits.

The Nairobi-based startup was founded in 2018 by Loise Wanjiku Ngugi.

E-tiba’s services range from standard nursing care, such as wound dressing, infusions and medication management, to more specialized support, including palliative care, chronic disease management and rehabilitation. The platform also offers practical assistance such as meal preparation, transport to medical appointments and mobility support.

Appointments are booked online, and users can view the qualifications of each caregiver, which the company says helps build trust and strengthens continuity of care.

In addition to connecting patients and providers, E-tiba also has a training component. The E-tiba Training College and an e-learning platform offer courses in basic patient care, community health assistance, dementia care and other fields. According to the company, this helps professionalize caregivers and ensure consistent quality standards.

This combined service and training model aims to improve patient safety while creating formal employment opportunities in the home-care sector.

For patients and their families, E-tiba brings greater comfort and continuity of care, including fewer trips to clinics, personalized support and access to trained providers. For the wider health system, the platform could help ease pressure on facilities by enabling safe and appropriate home-based care.

Adoni Conrad Quenum

Posted On samedi, 06 décembre 2025 18:07 Written by
  • AfDB grants €17.7 m loan to advance Cape Verde’s e-governance reforms

  • Program boosts digital business environment and modernizes public finance systems

  • Measures target growth, transparency, and stronger private-sector competitiveness

The African Development Bank (AfDB) on Monday approved a 17.71 million euro ($20.63 million) loan for the second phase of Cape Verde's E-Governance and Public Financial Management Reform Program.

The bank said the funding is designed to stimulate economic growth through digitization while strengthening private sector competitiveness. It follows financing approved in 2024 and is intended to enable the Cape Verdean government to deepen its structural reforms.

According to Abdoulaye Coulibaly, director of the AfDB's Governance and Economic Reform Department, this initiative also aims to "stimulate economic growth through digitization and private sector competitiveness, while advancing e-governance reforms, to modernize public administration and sanitize public finances."

The first component of the program concerns improving the business environment via digital solutions. The country plans to introduce an e-Justice system, launch a call for proposals to attract operators to the technology park, and regulate the settlement of digital nomads, a strategic segment for Cape Verde's economy.

The second component involves modernizing public finances. The government will publish an action plan to reduce tax expenditures, strengthen budget transparency and improve the efficiency of public resource management. The funding will also support a public expenditure review scheduled for early 2026.

The main beneficiaries of this program include the Ministry of the Digital Economy, the Central Bank of Cape Verde, the Institute for Gender Equality, the National Revenue Directorate, and the Public Procurement Regulatory Authority.

Adoni Conrad Quenum

Posted On samedi, 06 décembre 2025 18:00 Written by
  • Bricoram, founded in 2023, connects Algerian consumers with professionals across more than 100 service categories.

  • The platform operates free-of-charge for clients and prioritizes rapid matching based on geography and declared skills.

  • Founder Younes Chaoui, an AI specialist, previously worked for Kostango, IDEX and Deloitte.

Younes Chaoui, an Algerian computer scientist specialized in artificial intelligence, founded Bricoram after he observed consumers’ persistent difficulty finding reliable service providers. He created the platform to align with daily usage habits and deliver a simple digital access point for household services.

Chaoui launched Bricoram in 2023 to connect households seeking services with qualified professionals. The platform lists more than 100 categories, initially focusing on everyday needs such as plumbing while progressively opening to additional trades.

Bricoram operates free for clients. It allows users to post requests, receive offers from professionals, and select the preferred proposal. After a client submits a request, Bricoram automatically notifies nearby providers. Professionals then send offers, which clients receive via email, SMS and app notification. Users can compare profiles, speak with providers by phone, WhatsApp or internal chat, and post a review after completion.

The platform positions itself as a visibility and business-development tool for professionals. Providers open an account and complete a detailed profile describing their activity, services, portfolio and a photo. Bricoram then channels incoming requests according to the professional’s declared services and geographic coverage.

Chaoui holds a master’s degree in artificial intelligence from the University of Science and Technology Houari Boumediène in Algeria (2015). He also earned a master’s degree in decision computer science from Blaise Pascal University in France in 2016.

He began his career in 2016 as technical director at Kostango, a French digital operations-management platform. In 2023, he joined IDEX as a Django consultant before moving to Deloitte, where he worked as an Angular consultant until 2024.

This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba

Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum

Posted On vendredi, 05 décembre 2025 11:51 Written by
  • 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
  • Gigmile deploys more than 10,000 vehicles across several Ghanaian cities under its lease-to-own mobility model.
  • The platform targets informal gig workers with flexible payments aligned to fluctuating income.
  • The start-up integrates financing, mobility and financial inclusion to expand access to productive assets.

Ghana’s Gigmile positions itself as an innovative platform that merges fintech and mobility to address a pressing African challenge: enabling informal-economy workers—delivery riders, drivers and couriers—to access vehicles without the traditional barriers of credit checks or prior savings.

Gigmile is a digital solution developed by a Ghanaian start-up. The company provides a lease-to-own financing model through its flagship service, Gamma Mobility. The model adapts to gig workers’ fluctuating earnings. It offers flexible payments aligned with projected income and includes maintenance, insurance and required documentation. Founders Kayode Adeyinka and Samuel Esiri created the Accra-based start-up in 2022.

The company states that “thanks to partnerships with equipment suppliers and financial institutions, Gigmile offers automotive financing solutions with purchase options to disadvantaged informal workers in the logistics and transport sector.”

Workers can acquire a motorcycle, a tricycle or a car, use the vehicle for delivery or transport platforms, generate income and repay the asset gradually. Ownership transfers to the user once the plan ends. This approach converts an otherwise inaccessible productive asset into a tool for economic inclusion.

Recent figures indicate the scale of the model. The platform has deployed more than 10,000 vehicles across multiple cities, activated thousands of workers and enabled several hundred users to acquire their vehicles. A high repayment rate and intensive vehicle use confirm the viability of the model.

Gigmile aims to build financial inclusion and employability alongside mobility provision. By granting access to a productive asset, the company offers an alternative to precarious informal work, opens a pathway to entrepreneurship and supports an economic segment often unreachable through traditional banking channels.

In essence, Gigmile shows how an African fintech can combine technology, inclusive financing and mobility to create long-term opportunities. By democratizing access to vehicles, the platform reshapes access to work, autonomy and economic dignity for millions of workers across the continent.

This article was initially published in French by Adoni Conrad Quenum

Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum

 

Posted On vendredi, 05 décembre 2025 08:44 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
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