South Africa commemorates Freedom Day

Source: Government of South Africa

South Africa commemorates Freedom Day

Communities in and around Bloemfontein in the Free State have gathered at the Dr Rantlai Molemele Stadium in the Mangaung Metropolitan Municipality for the national Freedom Day celebrations.

President Cyril Ramaphosa will give the keynote address at the stadium.

Similar celebrations are being held in all provinces throughout the country, led by the Premiers.

Freedom Day 2026 marks the 32nd anniversary of South Africa’s first democratic elections held on 27 April 1994, and stands as a testament to the country’s journey towards democracy, justice, equality and human dignity.

Freedom Day 2026 is commemorated under the theme: “Freedom and the Rule of Law: Thirty Years of Democratic Citizenship”.

The commemoration highlights three decades since the adoption of the Constitution and underscores the importance of constitutional supremacy, the rule of law, and democratic citizenship in shaping South Africa’s future.

Freedom Month provides an opportunity for South Africans to reflect on the gains of democracy, honour the sacrifices of those who fought for freedom, and recommit to building a united, inclusive and just society. 

It also serves as a platform to promote active citizenship, deepen understanding of constitutional rights and strengthen social cohesion, particularly among young people.

SAnews spoke to Seipate Moeti from Botshabelo, who reflected on the importance of this year’s Freedom Day celebrations.

“To me, celebrating Freedom Day means a lot. We fought for our freedom. Today South Africa is a free country. Unfortunately many paid a heavy price for our freedom.” 

Moeti called on all South Africans to take part in Freedom Day celebrations in their provinces. “Celebrating our Freedom Day is something big to us.”

Echoing Moeti’s sentiments, Israel Molantoa said many lost their lives in the struggle for freedom.

“Today as South Africans, we are enjoying the benefits of our freedom,” Molantoa said.

This year’s national event takes place within the context of several significant national milestones, including the 30th anniversary of the adoption of the Constitution, 70 years since the Women’s March of 1956, and 50 years since the Soweto youth uprising.

These milestones continue to shape South Africa’s democratic journey by inspiring continued transformation.

Sport, Arts and Culture Minister Gayton McKenzie continues the Ministerial Outreach Programme in Bloemfontein investing in young talent, inclusion and community development through sport. 

The Minister is expected to handover two multipurpose sport facilities to two schools in Bloemfontein prior to commencement of the Freedom Day celebration. – SAnews.gov.za

Edwin

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Keynote address by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the 2026 Freedom Day National Celebrations, Dr Rantlai Molemela Stadium, Bloemfontein

Source: President of South Africa –

Programme Director,
Ministers and Deputy Ministers,
Premier of the Free State, Ms MaQueen Letsoha-Mathae,
Premiers, MECs and Executive Mayors,
Members of Parliament,
Members of the Judiciary,
Representatives of Chapter Nine Institutions,
Traditional, faith-based and community leaders,
Members of the Diplomatic Corps,
Distinguished guests,
Fellow South Africans,

Dumelang. Goeie môre. Sanibonani. Molweni. Lotjhani. Ndi matsheloni. Good morning.

I greet you all on this Freedom Day.

Thirty-two years ago, on the 27th of April 1994, South Africa was born.

The morning of the 27 April 1994 did not begin like an ordinary day. It began with great anticipation, excitement and a determination by millions of South Africans to participate in the birth of a nation.

Before sunrise millions of our people stood in long lines – young and old, rural and urban, black and white. Many were exposed to heavy rain and burning sun but they waited with patience, pride and dignity to cast their votes for the very first time.

More than 20 million South Africans participated in an election that was peaceful, free and fair.

It was a celebration of the human spirit and its capacity to overcome adversity.

It is an honour to mark this occasion here in Bloemfontein, where the flame of freedom was lit.

It was here in Mangaung that the African National Congress was born in 1912, bringing together for the first time people from across our country to stand against oppression and dispossession.

This is a province that suffered terribly the cruelty of colonialism and apartheid.

Here in Bloemfontein and in towns across the province, tens of thousands of Afrikaners and Africans were held in inhuman conditions in British concentration camps during the Anglo-Boer War.

Many thousands, mostly women and children, died. Their suffering stands as a shared, though unevenly remembered, chapter of South Africa’s past, one that calls for remembrance, honesty and humanity.

This is a province with a history of courageous resistance.

Women from the then Orange Free State were among the first to rise against the extension of pass laws in 1913, with protests breaking out in Jagersfontein, Winburg and Bloemfontein.

They were arrested and imprisoned and their families were left without caregivers. Instead of being broken, the women of the Orange Free State became more determined because they would not accept a system that denied them dignity and freedom.

This was the site of the Witsieshoek Peasants’ Revolt of 1950 against the apartheid government’s oppressive land control policies. This was one of the most significant acts of resistance in rural South Africa.

The revolt was about the livelihood of rural people regarding their cattle, wealth, security, identity and dignity that an oppressive government wanted to destroy.

The Witsieshoek Peasants’ Revolt demonstrated that the struggle for freedom was also fought in the valleys, in the fields and in the hearts of rural communities. It was fought by farmers in the rural areas, families and ordinary people who chose courage over silence.

It was the people of this province that took Mama Winnie Mandela into the hearts and gave her comfort when she was banished to Brandfort in 1977.

History is often told through great speeches and grand events. But sometimes, its most powerful chapters are written by ordinary people who choose humanity over fear.

When Mama Winnie Mandela was banished to Brandfort, the apartheid rulers thought they were isolating her and breaking her spirit and influence. The people of Brandfort here in the Free State did something remarkable: they did not let that voice fade. They carried it. They strengthened it. And they made it their own. They united in compassion and that became stronger than the system of a apartheid itself.

Last month we laid to rest a son of this province, the first Premier of the Free State and a stalwart of the liberation struggle, Mr Mosiuoa ‘Terror’ Lekota. He was a brave and principled leader who served this country with distinction.

On this Freedom Day, we honour his memory.

Today, we recall the words of our first democratic President Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela at his inauguration, when he said:

“The time for the healing of wounds has come. The moment to bridge the chasms that divide us has come. The time to build is upon us.”

On that first day of our freedom, as a nation, we entered into a social contract to build a society anchored in human dignity, equal rights and freedom for all.

Thirty years ago, the Constitution of the Republic, the legal foundation of that contract, was signed into law. That constitution became our birth certificate as a nation.

Our Constitution, which is widely regarded around the world as one of the most progressive, visionary and influential constitutions ever adopted, is a powerful promise about freedom and stands as our collective shield – protecting the freedom our people fought for.

Out of struggle came freedom; through our Constitution we have entrenched it as the unshakable foundation of our nation.

We have come far.

We stand here today not only as citizens of a democratic nation, but as custodians of a hard-won legacy of freedom. A legacy won in struggle. A legacy shaped by sacrifice, courage and an unbreakable belief in in freedom and justice.

There was a time in this country when freedom was not a right but a dream.

It was a time when voices were silenced, dignity was denied to millions who were excluded from the life of the country they called home. But our people refused to accept that fate.

They organised. They resisted. They endured. And they won their freedom.

And in that struggle, they made a simple but powerful declaration. The people of South Africa shall be free and that South Africa belongs to all who live in it.

When freedom came it was not a political transition. It was moral transformation. And at the centre of that transformation stands our constitution.

It is not just a legal document. It is a shield against injustice. A foundation for equality. A promise to every citizen that through it South Africa will never be governed by exclusion. Dignity will never be denied to the citizens of South Africa and freedom will never be reserved for a few.

Our freedom resulted and the right to speak and be heard. The right to move and belong. The right to vote and shape our future. The right to live with dignity. Our constitution ensured that freedom is not a slogan but a live reality.

In the 32 years of our democracy, we have built a progressive constitutional democracy, firmly anchored in the rule of law, with an independent judiciary that serves as a guardian of the rights of all.

We have expanded access to healthcare, housing, education, water and electricity on an unprecedented scale.

We have transformed our education system that was used to perpetuate oppression to ensure universal access to education by introducing no-fee schools to expand access to education to children from poor households. Our National School Nutrition Programme feeds more than nine million learners every single day.

Through the National Student Financial Aid Scheme, we have made tertiary education accessible to students from low-income households.

Last year, we recorded the highest matric pass rate in the history of South Africa.

Since the dawn of our democracy, we have steadily worked to expand access to quality health care for all. We have built clinics and hospitals, provided free health care to pregnant women and young children, reduced child mortality and increased life expectancy.

Now we are working together to establish the National Health Insurance – the NHI – so that every person in this country has equal access to quality health care regardless of their ability to pay.

We are making progress on land reform, restoring land to many of those dispossessed since the introduction of the 1913 Natives Land Act and continuing to support its productive use.

The Free State is one of the provinces that is leading the country in providing comprehensive agricultural support to emerging and aspiring farmers.

Over the last 32 years, we have used our broad-based black economic empowerment policies to expand the participation of black South Africans, women and persons with disability in the economy.

We have begun to redress the economic injustices of our past, expanding ownership, control and management of our economy beyond a privileged few.

The progress we have made is evident in improvements in the income and quality of life of African, coloured and Indian South Africans and the gradual reduction in inequality between races.

But this is not enough. There is much more that needs to be done.

That is why we are working to strengthen our broad-based black economic empowerment policies, to make them more effective and more efficient – to ensure that they actually deliver the fundamental changes that our economy needs.

Dignity means that people must be able to live free from fear and violence.

To give greater effect to our freedom, we have dedicated greater resources and effort to tackling organised crime, gangsterism, gender-based violence and other forms of violent crime.

We are reforming and strengthening the criminal justice system, rooting out corruption and building a police service and a prosecuting authority in which people can have trust and confidence.

We call on all South Africans to be part of this work, to build communities, homes, schools and workplaces that are safe and secure.

Today we take the opportunity to reflect, renew and reaffirm our commitment to the social contract we entered into 32 years ago.

This is a compact that demands active citizenship, democratic oversight and a State that delivers justice, services, opportunity and dignity in return for public trust.

This is a solemn agreement that must be renewed in every interaction between the state and the people to whom it is accountable, in every service delivered and in every life improved.

The Government of National Unity is determined to drive inclusive growth and job creation, to reduce poverty and tackle the high cost of living, and to build a capable, ethical and developmental state.

This means we must address and overcome the many challenges facing South Africans today.

Failing water infrastructure, collapsing municipalities and deteriorating services are not mere inconveniences. They directly affect the quality of daily life. They constrain the growth of businesses and the creation of jobs.

Our resolve to strengthen local government provides an opportunity to transform municipalities, making them better run, more efficient and more responsive to the needs of our people.

This is important because the truest test of our democracy is whether freedom translates into material change in people’s lives.

Dignity starts with the most basic things: a roof over one’s head, clean running water, reliable electricity. Freedom is about the ability to go to a clinic when one is are sick, to have a school for one’s children, and being provided for in old age.

Advancing human dignity is the promise of our Constitution and the fundamental value from which all other human rights flow.

It is in pursuit of this fundamental value that we set out in the 2026 State of the Nation Address an ambitious economic agenda anchored in massive infrastructure investment, structural reforms and economic transformation.

We are removing obstacles to investment, making our economy more competitive and fixing key state-owned enterprises like Eskom and Transnet.

We are working with all social partners to grow industries that create jobs, such as agriculture, mining, tourism, manufacturing, renewable energy and digital industries.

It is to advance human dignity that we continue to act without fear or favour against those who undermine the promise of freedom.

Every rand stolen is an attack on our democracy.

Every project that is not completed is a betrayal of a community.

We will not rest until those who have hollowed out our institutions and diverted public resources for private gain are held to account.

No society can be free and equal while women and children continue to live in fear.

We must therefore do more to end gender-based violence.

When we held the Free State Men’s Indaba here in Bloemfontein last year, I said:

“South Africa does not need a so-called new generation of men. It needs the men and boys of this generation to do better, and to be better. We need men who are protectors of women, not perpetrators. Men of South Africa must stand up and be counted, and say: Not in our Name.”

That is the challenge that we, the men of South Africa, need to take up on this Freedom Day.

Fellow South Africans,

We did not walk alone into freedom.

We were carried by a tide of solidarity from the nations of Africa, among many others.

These countries opened their borders to our liberation fighters. They shared their bread and their homes. They spoke for us when we could not speak for ourselves.

The leaders and people of Africa kept our struggle alive.

It cannot be, and it must never be, that we trample into the dust the African fellowship that made our freedom possible.

We are a people who live the value of ubuntu.

We should never allow the legitimate concerns of our communities about illegal migration to breed prejudice towards our fellow Africans.

We must not allow these concerns to give rise to xenophobia, directed towards people from other African countries or other any parts of the world.

Instead, we must insist that the law be upheld and enforced.

That is why we are clamping down on illegal migration and on businesses that flout our laws by hiring undocumented persons at the expense of our citizens.

We are actively rooting out corruption in our immigration system.

We will not allow people to take the law into their own hands.

We extend hospitality to those who are guests in our country, with the expectation that generosity is honoured with respect for our society and its laws.

As a nation that defeated colonialism and apartheid through international solidarity, we carry a responsibility to advance constitutional values beyond our borders.

We remain committed to multilateralism, respect for international law and principled diplomacy.

International law was born from the devastation of global conflict. It is a shield for all countries, regardless of their size or influence.

True multilateralism demands respect for diversity while remaining firm on core principles: sovereignty, human rights, accountability and peaceful coexistence.

This Freedom Day stands as a reminder that political liberation was never the final destination. It was the beginning of a longer journey towards economic freedom and social justice.

Let us continue to work together, sparing neither strength nor courage, to complete the unfinished task: the realisation of freedom that is grounded in justice, dignity and prosperity for all.

Our future will not be built by forgetting where we come from, but by acting with courage on what we have learned – united by one Constitution, bound by a collective responsibility to each other, and in pursuit of a shared destiny.

The Freedom were celebrating today belongs to all of us.

It does not belong to one party. It does not belong to one generation.

It belongs to the people of South Africa – past, present and future.

Let us protect it. Let us uphold it. Let us live by it.

And so, as we reflect on how far we have come, and as we look to the future we must still build, let us remember this:

The freedom we enjoy today was not handed to us – it was fought for by our people and secured forever by our Constitution.

Let us be worthy of that freedom.

Let us deepen it. Let us defend it. And let us ensure that it is felt by every South African, every day.

May God bless South Africa.
Nkosi Sikelel’ iAfrika.
Morena boloka setjhaba sa heso.
God seën Suid-Afrika.
Mudzimu fhatutshedza Afurika. 
Hosi katekisa Afrika.

Kea leboga.

I thank you.

Uganda: Parliament passes Shs84.3 trillion 2026/27 Budget

Source: APO – Report:

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Parliament has passed a Shs84.3 trillion national budget for the 2026/2027 financial year following the adoption of the Appropriation Bill and the report of the Budget Committee that details how the funds will be raised and spent amid growing fiscal pressure from debt and statutory obligations.

The budget was approved during the sitting of the House chaired by Speaker Anita Among on Friday, 24 April 2026.  

Finance State Minister, Hon. Henry Musasizi told Parliament that the budget will be financed through domestic revenue of Shs44.18 trillion, representing more than half of the total budget. 
Other sources include domestic borrowing of Shs11.97 trillion, external project support of Shs11.27 trillion, domestic refinancing of Shs13.97 trillion, petroleum revenues of Shs1.44 trillion, budget support grants of Shs1.22 trillion and local government revenues of Shs339 billion.

Of the approved expenditure, Shs47.16 trillion has been allocated as discretionary spending while Shs37.23 trillion is classified as statutory expenditure covering debt servicing, wages, pensions and other legally mandated obligations.

Presenting the Budget Committee report, the Deputy Chairperson, Hon. Remigio Achia noted that a significant share of the budget is absorbed before reaching service delivery sectors, largely due to debt obligations.

Debt servicing alone is projected to consume about Shs33.4 trillion nearly 40 per cent of the total budget. 
Interest payments are estimated at Shs12.4 trillion driven mainly by domestic borrowing, while principal repayments push total debt servicing above Shs33 trillion, making it the single largest expenditure item.

Achia said the budget is anchored on boosting production, industrialisation, and household incomes across key sectors.

Agro-industrialisation has been allocated Shs2.2 trillion for agricultural research, inputs, irrigation, extension services, agro-processing and market access. 
Tourism development receives Shs571.5 billion for infrastructure at tourism sites and global promotion.

Mineral-based industrial development including oil and gas is allocated Shs435.5 billion for mineral exploration, the national mining company, mineral markets, and ongoing petroleum infrastructure projects.

Science, technology and innovation including ICT and the creative industry, is allocated Shs1.1 trillion to support innovation, digitisation of government services, internet expansion and business process outsourcing.

Shs2.5 trillion has been allocated to wealth creation programmes under the Parish Development Model, Emyooga and youth initiatives, while the security sector receives Shs10.2 trillion to maintain peace and stability.

Human capital development takes the largest share at Shs13.5 trillion including a phased 25 per cent salary enhancement for teachers and Shs496.3 billion for preparations for AFCON 2027.

Infrastructure development is allocated Shs10.8 trillion for roads, railways, water, electricity and transport systems. 
Manufacturing receives Shs1.04 trillion, while environmental protection is allocated Shs514 billion.
Other allocations include Shs651.5 billion for administration of justice and Shs1.2 trillion for legislation and oversight.

Additional funding has also been provided for priority gaps, including Shs664.3 billion for road completion works, Shs45 billion for rural electrification, Shs100 billion for medicines and health supplies, Shs20 billion for export promotion, Shs100 billion for cattle compensation in Northern Uganda, Shs20 billion for ambulances and Shs10 billion for maintenance.

In a minority report, Kira Municipality MP, Hon. Ssemujju Nganda strongly opposed the late changes, accusing government of undermining the Public Finance Management Act by introducing what he termed as last-minute “trafficking” of budget figures.

Ssemujju Nganda said the corrigenda, introduced just 48 hours before the deadline, increased the budget by Shs997 billion and reallocated Shs862 billion without supporting procurement or recruitment plans.
“This money is susceptible to abuse,” Ssemujju warned adding that the late movements were deliberately designed to shift funds into areas with easier access.

He argued that four expenditure items alone consume about 70 per cent of the budget; debt servicing at Shs33.6 trillion , wages and salaries at Shs14.1 trillion, administrative expenses at Shs8.2 trillion  and classified expenditure at Shs2.6 trillion.

Ssemujju Nganda also questioned Uganda’s reparations to the Democratic Republic of Congo amounting to Shs260.4 billion.

During debate, Hon. Asuman Basalirwa (JEEMA, Bugiri Municipality) called for support for sickle cell disease in the budget noting that the prevalence is high in Uganda and yet no support was provided in the budget.

Speaker Among asked government officials to desist from borrowing money and then doing a feasibility study later.

The Minister for Information, Communication and Technology and National Guidance, Hon. Chris Baryomunsi defended borrowing stating that everywhere in the world people borrow, and that Uganda is paying back and using it well.

Kassanda County North MP, Hon. Patrick Nsamba Oshabe proposed that several allocated funds could be rechannelled for example from Atiak Sugar works to health workers and education.

Hon. Edson Rugumayo, the Youth Representative Western Region said Ugandans are interested in deliverables and thereby indicating in the budgets which roads will be constructed and how it will impact them is crucial.

Buhanguzi East Representative, Hon. Stephen Aeera (expressed disappointment that Shs100 billion had been proposed for Bunyoro University but it was reduced to Shs87 billion later to Shs12.5 billion.

The Minister of State for Education (Sports), Hon. Peter Ogwang said government will work to ensure that the university is built based on the pledge made by the President.

The Leader of the Opposition, Hon. Joel Ssenyonyi stated that government has been allocating funds for the International Specialised Hospital Lubowa and yet there is no progress.
“Why do you keep coming back for money here? We should stop playing around with money, because nearly Shs1 trillion has been spent,” he said.

The Minister of State for Primary Health Care, Hon. Margaret Muhanga said the hospital is at 75 per cent completion, but pledged to provide a comprehensive statement on the status of the hospital in less than two weeks.

Speaker Anita Among stated that government has decided not to pay money directly to ROKO Construction but to the supplier. She said ROKO’s work hard completely slowed. 

– on behalf of Parliament of the Republic of Uganda.

Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Holds Phone Call with Saudi Foreign Minister

Source: Government of Qatar

Doha, April 26, 2026

HE Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al-Thani held a phone call with HH Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah Al Saud.

During the call, the two sides reviewed bilateral cooperation and ways to enhance it, and discussed regional developments, particularly those related to the ceasefire between the United States and Iran, as well as efforts aimed at de-escalation to support security and stability in the region.

HE the Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs stressed the importance of all parties responding to ongoing mediation efforts, in a way that would help address the root causes of the crisis through peaceful means and dialogue, and lead to a sustainable agreement that prevents renewed escalation. 

Studia Inc renforce son développement en Afrique et conclut un partenariat stratégique avec D.IA Advisory pour accélérer le déploiement local de ses solutions d’état civil

Source: Africa Press Organisation – French

Forte de la numérisation de près de 10 millions d’actes d’état civil à Madagascar, Studia Inc (https://STD-Inc.mg) dispose aujourd’hui d’une capacité opérationnelle éprouvée pour traiter, structurer et fiabiliser des volumes massifs de données critiques, constituant le socle indispensable à toute stratégie d’identité numérique. La modernisation de l’état civil s’impose comme une priorité pour les États. Dans ce contexte, Studia Inc se distingue par la maîtrise complète de son cœur de métier : la digitalisation industrielle des registres d’état civil, y compris dans des environnements complexes caractérisés par des archives dégradées, dispersées ou difficilement exploitables.

Les chiffres sont sans appel : selon le rapport The Right Start in Life de l’UNICEF (décembre 2024), seulement 51 % des enfants de moins de 5 ans sont enregistrés en Afrique subsaharienne — une région qui concentre à elle seule la moitié des 90 millions d’enfants sans identité légale dans le monde. La situation est encore plus critique en Afrique de l’Est et Centrale, où ce taux tombe à 41 %. Sans accélération significative, le continent pourrait compter plus de 100 millions d’enfants non enregistrés d’ici 2030. Ces individus demeurent invisibles aux yeux de l’État, sans accès aux droits fondamentaux ni aux services publics.

Une expertise technologique au service de la fiabilite des donnees

Studia Inc, entreprise spécialisée dans la numérisation et l’indexation de données à forte volumétrie, s’affirme comme un acteur de référence dans ce domaine. Dans le cadre du programme national à Madagascar, l’entreprise a conduit l’inventaire, la numérisation et l’indexation de près de 10 millions d’actes d’état civil, mobilisant 500 personnes sur 7 mois — soit 70 000 jours/hommes — pour couvrir 1 695 communes à travers 11 régions prioritaires, jusqu’aux zones les plus isolées du territoire, grâce à des unités mobiles autonomes équipées en connectivité satellite et énergie solaire.

L’approche de Studia Inc repose sur l’intégration de l’intelligence artificielle au cœur des processus de digitalisation.

Ses modèles d’OCR spécialisés permettent l’extraction automatisée de données manuscrites complexes et la segmentation intelligente des registres en actes exploitables. Cette capacité à transformer des archives physiques en données structurées constitue un levier déterminant pour les États. Un dispositif de double saisie aveugle, combinant traitement algorithmique et validation humaine indépendante, garantit un niveau de fiabilité élevé, conforme aux exigences des systèmes d’identité nationaux.

Un partenariat structuré autour de la complémentarité des expertises

Le partenariat avec D.IA Advisory, entreprise de services numériques basée au Sénégal, repose sur une répartition claire des rôles.

Studia Inc conserve la pleine responsabilité des opérations de digitalisation et d’indexation des registres d’état civil, cœur de son expertise métier.

D.IA Advisory intervient en appui sur les dimensions d’intégration locale et de déploiement, notamment pour :

  • l’intégration des données dans les systèmes d’information existants
  • l’interopérabilité avec les plateformes nationales
  • l’adaptation aux cadres réglementaires et aux exigences de souveraineté
  • l’accompagnement des institutions

Cette organisation permet d’assurer à la fois un haut niveau d’expertise technique et une exécution efficace au plus près des réalités locales.

« Notre expertise repose sur la maîtrise de la digitalisation à grande échelle des registres d’état civil, avec un niveau d’exigence élevé en matière de qualité et de fiabilité des données. Ce partenariat avec D.IA Advisory nous permet de renforcer notre capacité à déployer nos solutions dans des environnements locaux variés. » JEAN-CLAUDE FIORAVANTI — DIRECTEUR GÉNÉRAL, STUDIA INC

« Notre rôle est de garantir une intégration fluide et durable des solutions dans les systèmes existants, en tenant compte des spécificités institutionnelles et réglementaires locales. » ABDOULAYE DIA — FONDATEUR, D.IA ADVISORY

En combinant expertise métier, capacité opérationnelle et ancrage local, ce partenariat vise à accompagner concrètement les gouvernements africains dans la modernisation de leurs registres d’état civil, tout en contribuant au développement d’infrastructures d’identité numérique fiables, inclusives et durables.

À l’occasion du Sommet ID4Africa 2026 (12–15 mai 2026, Parc des Expositions d’Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire), les deux partenaires présenteront leur vision commune et les solutions développées à destination des États et institutions du continent.

Distribué par APO Group pour Studia Inc..

CONTACTS PRESSE :
JEAN-CLAUDE FIORAVANTI

Directeur Général — Studia Inc
jean-claude.fioravanti@studia.fr
+261 38 49 138 00  (WhatsApp)

ABDOULAYE DIA
D.IA Advisory
adia@dia-advisory.com
+33 7 82 35 31 30 
+221 78 961 80 95

À propos de Studia Inc :
Studia Inc est spécialisée dans la numérisation, l’indexation et la valorisation de données complexes et volumineuses. Elle accompagne les institutions publiques et privées dans leurs projets de transformation digitale, notamment dans le domaine de l’état civil, en proposant des solutions innovantes, sécurisées et adaptées aux enjeux de souveraineté des données. www.Studia.fr

À propos de D.IA Advisory :
D.IA Advisory est une ESN sénégalaise spécialisée dans le conseil stratégique et le déploiement de solutions numériques en Afrique. Elle accompagne les organisations publiques et privées dans la conception et la mise en œuvre de projets technologiques à fort impact social et institutionnel. www.DIA-Advisory.com

Media files

Uganda: Opposition calls Sovereignty Protection Bill, redundant and unconstitutional

Source: APO

The Opposition has rejected the Protection of Sovereignty Bill, 2026 describing it as unnecessary, legally redundant and potentially harmful to Uganda’s democratic and economic environment.

The Leader of the Opposition (LoP), Hon. Joel Ssenyonyi while appearing before a joint committee scrutinising the Bill on Friday, 24 April 2026, said the proposed law duplicates provisions in statutes such as the Penal Code Act, Anti-Money Laundering Act, Public Finance Management Act and the NGO Act. 
“We have a plethora of laws that touch critical concerns that anyone would have; the Penal Code Act captures a number of those provisions, so it is redundant,” Ssenyonyi said.

He explained that crimes such as treason, illicit financial flows and unlawful foreign funding are already criminalised under existing frameworks.
“If a foreign embassy tries to fund a violent coup, the Penal Code Act already criminalises treason. If someone launders illicit foreign money, the Anti-Money Laundering Act already mandates declarations of source of funds,” he added.

Ssenyonyi warned that the Bill introduces harsh provisions that could negatively affect Uganda’s economy and civic space. 
He cited a clause capping foreign funding at Shs400 million where by receiving higher amounts without ministerial approval attracts penalties of up to 20 years in prison.
The LoP raised concern over Clause 2(2) which criminalises influencing the public against government policy, arguing that it undermines the constitutional role of the Opposition.

Similarly, the Uganda People’s Congress (UPC) through its General Secretary Francis Ebil called for the withdrawal of the Bill, describing it as unconstitutional. “By reclassifying Ugandans as purely foreigners based on residence, the Bill is by passing the 1995 Constitution which guarantees that every person who was a citizen at the commencement of the Constitution remains a citizen,” Ebil said.

Ebil criticised the proposed penalties, including jail terms of up to 20 years and fines reaching Shs4 billion, saying they violate protections against cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment.

He noted that definitions such as ‘economic sabotage’, ‘foreigner’ and ‘foreign agent’,  should be described with precision as they could be abused to suppress press freedom and free expression.
“A New Vision journalist could be prosecuted for publishing an accurate report… if the report leads to a drop-in company shares or investor confidence,” he cautioned.

The committee called for further engagement on the Bill rather than outright rejection with Bugabula County North MP, Hon. John Teira noting that the Bill targets subversive activities against the interests of Uganda rather than applying broadly.

Kibale County MP, Hon. Richard Oriebo maintained that consolidating sovereignty-related provisions into one law might be more effective than amending multiple existing statutes

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Parliament of the Republic of Uganda.

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Uganda: Gov’t suspends trade order enforcement

Source: APO

The Minister of State for Trade, Cooperatives and Industry (Industry), Hon. David Bahati has revealed that government has suspended the trade order across the country.

Bahati made the revelation during the plenary sitting on Friday, 24 April 2026 following concerns raised by Members of Parliament (MPs).

In February this year, Kampala Capital City Authority (KCCA) and local government authorities across the country started a major crack down on roadside vendors and illegal kiosks in a bid to create orderliness.

The move has however, sparked public outcry and lawmakers have added their voices, urging government to reconsider the action.

Bahati told the legislators that government is consulting on how to better manage the matter, following the concerns raised by religious leaders and traders. 
“We shall have a final meeting at the end of June so that at the beginning of July we have a refined way of operating. We did apologise to the religious leaders because some people while carrying out evictions made reckless statements against various religions,” Bahati said. 

He also clarified that the suspension does not negate the evictions that have already been carried out. “We are suspending where we had not reached but where we have covered, it will remain, but by June, we shall have a better way of handling this matter,” he said.

The matter was first raised by Hon. Solomon Silwanyi, (NRM, Bukooli County Central) who said that the evictions have disrupted so many livelihoods. 
“Since the minister has committed and says that they have suspended the evictions, a letter should be written to the town councils because the evictions are still going on,” he said.

Speaker Anita Among urged government to exercise caution in implementation of such livelihood altering decisions. 
“The trade order is not bad but government should not use goons to evict. This should be done progressively; make these people understand that they are operating in road reserves and where we need markets to relocate these people, we put them there,” she said.

Kira Municipality MP, Hon. Ssemujju Nganda wondered what plans are in place to restore the businesses that have already been destroyed. 
“What happens to lives you have already ruined? Next time you want to restore trade order, can you do it with a human face?” he asked. 

Erute County South Representative, Hon. Jonathan Odur welcomed the suspension and asked government to always consult before implementing decisions that affect people’s sources of income.  
“Everyone wants this country to be orderly but there was no consultation and I am happy now that you are going to consult,” Odur said. 

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Parliament of the Republic of Uganda.

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Studia Inc strengthens its African expansion and concludes a strategic partnership with D.IA Advisory to accelerate the local deployment of its civil registration solutions

Source: APO

Building on the digitisation of nearly 10 million civil registration records in Madagascar, Studia Inc (https://STD-Inc.mg) now possesses proven operational capacity to process, structure, and secure massive volumes of critical data — the indispensable foundation for any digital identity strategy. The modernisation of civil registration has become a priority for states. In this context, Studia Inc stands out through its complete mastery of its core business: the industrial digitisation of civil registers, including in complex environments characterised by degraded, dispersed, or difficult-to-use archives.

The figures are unambiguous: according to the UNICEF report The Right Start in Life (December 2024), only 51% of children under 5 are registered in sub-Saharan Africa — a region that alone accounts for half of the world’s 90 million children without legal identity. The situation is even more critical in East and Central Africa, where the rate falls to 41%. Without significant acceleration, the continent could have more than 100 million unregistered children by 2030. These individuals remain invisible to the state, without access to fundamental rights or public services.

Technological expertise at the service of data reliability

Studia Inc, specialised in high-volume data digitisation and indexing, is establishing itself as a leading player in this field. As part of the national EC-MADA programme in Madagascar, the company conducted the inventory, digitisation, and indexing of nearly 10 million civil registration records, mobilising 500 people over 7 months — 70,000 person-days — to cover 1,695 communes across 11 priority regions, reaching the most isolated areas of the territory through autonomous mobile units equipped with satellite connectivity and solar energy.

Studia Inc’s approach is built on the integration of artificial intelligence at the heart of digitisation processes. Its specialised OCR models enable the automated extraction of complex handwritten data and the intelligent segmentation of registers into exploitable records. A blind double-entry mechanism — combining algorithmic processing with independent human validation — guarantees a high level of reliability, consistent with the requirements of national identity systems. This combination of AI speed, human rigour, and mobile deployment makes it possible to operate at scale where the urgency is greatest, before this identity heritage disappears.

A partnership built on complementary expertise

The partnership with D.IA Advisory, a digital services company based in Senegal, is built on a clear division of roles. Studia Inc retains full responsibility for digitisation and indexing operations — its core business. D.IA Advisory provides support on local integration and deployment: integrating data into existing information systems, ensuring interoperability with national platforms, adapting to regulatory frameworks and data sovereignty requirements, and supporting institutions. This structure ensures both a high level of technical expertise and effective execution close to local realities.

« Our expertise is built on mastering large-scale digitisation of civil registration records, with exacting standards for data quality and reliability. This partnership with D.IA Advisory strengthens our capacity to deploy our solutions across diverse local environments. » Jean-Claude Fioravanti — CEO, Studia Inc

« Our role is to ensure the fluid and lasting integration of solutions into existing systems, taking into account local institutional and regulatory specificities. » Abdoulaye Dia — Founder, D.IA Advisory

By combining core expertise, operational capacity, and local presence, this partnership aims to concretely support African governments in modernising their civil registers, while contributing to the development of reliable, inclusive, and sustainable digital identity infrastructures.

At the ID4Africa 2026 Summit (12–15 May 2026, Abidjan Exhibition Centre, Côte d’Ivoire), both partners will present their shared vision and the solutions developed for states and institutions across the continent.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Studia Inc..

A Studia Inc reforça a sua expansão em África e conclui uma parceria estratégica com a D.IA Advisory para acelerar a implantação local das suas soluções de registo civil

Source: Africa Press Organisation – Portuguese –

Com base na digitalização de quase 10 milhões de actos de registo civil em Madagascár, a Studia Inc (https://STD-Inc.mg) dispõe hoje de uma capacidade operacional comprovada para tratar, estruturar e garantir a fiabilidade de volumes massivos de dados críticos — base indispensável para qualquer estratégia de identidade digital. A modernização do registo civil impõe-se como uma prioridade para os Estados. Neste contexto, a Studia Inc distingue-se pelo domínio completo do seu núcleo de actividade: a digitalização industrial dos registos civis, incluindo em ambientes complexos caracterizados por arquivos degradados, dispersos ou de difícil utilização.

Os números são inequívocos: segundo o relatório The Right Start in Life da UNICEF (dezembro de 2024), apenas 51% das crianças menores de 5 anos estão registadas na África subsariana — uma região que por si só representa metade dos 90 milhões de crianças sem identidade legal no mundo. A situação é ainda mais crítica na África Oriental e Central, onde a taxa desce para 41%. Sem uma aceleração significativa, o continente poderá ter mais de 100 milhões de crianças não registadas até 2030. Estes indivíduos permanecem invisíveis aos olhos do Estado, sem acesso a direitos fundamentais nem a serviços públicos.

Experiência tecnológica ao serviço da fiabilidade dos dados

A Studia Inc, especializada na digitalização e indexação de dados de grande volume, afirma-se como um actor de referência neste domínio. No âmbito do programa nacional EC-MADA em Madagascár, a empresa conduziu o inventário, a digitalização e a indexação de perto de 10 milhões de actos de registo civil, mobilizando 500 pessoas durante 7 meses — 70 000 dias-pessoa — para cobrir 1 695 comunas em 11 regiões prioritárias, até às áreas mais isoladas do território, através de unidades móveis autónomas equipadas com conectividade por satélite e energia solar.

A abordagem da Studia Inc assenta na integração da inteligência artificial no cerne dos processos de digitalização. Os seus modelos de OCR especializados permitem a extração automatizada de dados manuscritos complexos e a segmentação inteligente dos registos em actos exploráveis. Um dispositivo de dupla entrada cega — combinando tratamento algorítmico e validação humana independente — garante um elevado nível de fiabilidade, conforme com as exigências dos sistemas de identidade nacionais. Esta combinação — velocidade da IA, rigor humano, implantação móvel — permite operar à grande escala onde a urgência é maior, antes que este património identitário desapareça.

Uma parceria estruturada em torno da complementaridade das experiências

A parceria com a D.IA Advisory, empresa de serviços digitais sediada no Senegal, assenta numa repartição clara de funções. A Studia Inc mantém a plena responsabilidade pelas operações de digitalização e indexação — núcleo da sua actividade. A D.IA Advisory intervem em apoio nas dimensões de integração local e implementação: integração dos dados nos sistemas de informação existentes, interoperabilidade com as plataformas nacionais, adaptação aos quadros regulamentares e às exigências de soberania dos dados, e apoio às instituições. Esta organização garante simultaneamente um elevado nível de especialização técnica e uma execução eficaz próxima das realidades locais.

« A nossa experiência assenta no domínio da digitalização em larga escala dos registos civis, com padrões rigorosos de qualidade e fiabilidade dos dados. Esta parceria com a D.IA Advisory reforça a nossa capacidade de implementar as nossas soluções em ambientes locais diversificados. » Jean-Claude Fioravanti — Director-Geral, Studia Inc

« O nosso papel é garantir uma integração fluida e durável das soluções nos sistemas existentes, tendo em conta as especificidades institucionais e regulamentares locais. » Abdoulaye Dia — Fundador, D.IA Advisory

Ao combinar experiência de base, capacidade operacional e presença local, esta parceria visa apoiar concretamente os governos africanos na modernização dos seus registos civis, contribuindo para o desenvolvimento de infra-estruturas de identidade digital fiáveis, inclusivas e duradouras.

Por ocasião da Cúpula ID4Africa 2026 (12–15 de maio de 2026, Centro de Exposições de Abidjã, Costa do Marfim), os dois parceiros apresentarão a sua visão comum e as soluções desenvolvidas para os Estados e instituições do continente.

Distribuído pelo Grupo APO para Studia Inc..

CONTACTOS DE IMPRENSA:
JEAN-CLAUDE FIORAVANTI

Director-Geral — Studia Inc
jean-claude.fioravanti@studia.fr
+261 38 49 138 00  (WhatsApp)

ABDOULAYE DIA
D.IA Advisory
adia@dia-advisory.com
+33 7 82 35 31 30 
+221 78 961 80 95

Sobre a Studia Inc:
A Studia Inc é especializada na digitalização, indexação e valorização de dados complexos e voluminosos. Acompanha as instituições públicas e privadas nos seus projectos de transformação digital, nomeadamente no domínio do registo civil, propondo soluções inovadoras, seguras e adaptadas aos desafios da soberania dos dados. www.Studia.fr

Sobre a D.IA Advisory:
A D.IA Advisory é uma empresa senegalesa de serviços digitais especializada em consultoria estratégica e na implantação de soluções digitais em África. Acompanha as organizações públicas e privadas na concepção e implementação de projectos tecnológicos com elevado impacto social e institucional. www.DIA-Advisory.com

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Ghana’s fuel payment strategy works for now: how to fix longer term problems

Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Ishmael Tingbani, Associate Professor in Accounting, University of Southampton

Ghana introduced a new payment arrangement for petroleum imports in 2023, using gold instead of scarce US dollars. The policy was designed to ease pressure on the cedi by reducing the need for upfront dollar purchases to settle fuel import bills.

In an import-dependent economy, rising demand for US dollars usually weakens the domestic currency. Importers must exchange local currency for dollars. As the local currency loses value, the local cost of imports rises, driving inflation.

Ghana’s petroleum-for-gold strategy delivered short-term benefits. It reduced immediate demand for foreign exchange, supported relative stability in the cedi and contributed to moderating fuel price pressures and inflation.

The country is still vulnerable to global oil price shocks, however. That has become evident with the latest surge in oil prices triggered by instability in the Middle East. For oil-importing economies such as Ghana, geopolitical risks like this translate directly into higher fuel import costs and greater pressure on foreign-exchange reserves.

I am a scholar who has served as a technical adviser to Ghana’s Ministry of Energy and major oil firms. This article argues that Ghana’s current stabilisation measures are helping to manage short-term pressure, but they have not removed the country’s exposure to oil shocks. That matters because temporary relief should not be mistaken for structural reform.

The structural gaps are limited refining capacity, weak storage infrastructure and an underdeveloped downstream petroleum sector.

As long as these constraints remain, oil shocks will continue to transmit quickly into the exchange rate, inflation and the broader economy.

What’s working

Ghana is one of Africa’s largest gold producers, with output exceeding 120 tonnes annually.

The creation of the Ghana Gold Board, under the Ghana Gold Board Act, 2025 Act 1140, improves the state’s ability to mobilise gold through official channels. This is not a solution to Ghana’s energy problem. But it is a more credible stabilisation strategy than relying on politically driven fuel price interventions and implicit subsidies. Those strategies, seen in earlier periods, contributed to fiscal losses and market distortions.

Inflation has eased significantly over the past year, falling from peak levels in 2023 to around 3%-4% in early 2026. Fuel prices have moderated, with pump prices declining by over 20% year-on-year in Febuary 2026. This indicates that short term pressures are being managed.

But relief is not reform. Policies such as gold-for-oil cannot eliminate Ghana’s dependence on imported refined fuels.

The gaps

Ghana’s vulnerability to global oil shocks stems from the structure of its energy system. Despite producing crude from offshore fields such as Jubilee, TEN and Sankofa-Gye Nyame, the country remains heavily dependent on imported refined fuels priced and settled in US dollars. That mismatch ties the domestic economy directly to global oil markets.

In practice, this dependence is substantial. Domestic refining meets only a small share of demand, with roughly 72% of refined petroleum products supplied through imports in recent years. In other words, most of the fuel actually consumed in the economy is sourced from international markets rather than processed locally, reinforcing the country’s reliance on foreign currency.

These imports are concentrated in a few critical products that underpin everyday economic activity. Diesel accounts for the largest share, used extensively in transport, logistics, construction and backup power generation. Petrol (gasoline) supports road transport, while liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) is widely used for household cooking and some commercial purposes. In effect, Ghana’s import bill is not abstract. It underwrites the economy’s core energy needs, from moving goods and people to powering businesses and households.

This dependency on imports is driven by three factors.

  • Limited refining capacity. Ghana’s ability to process crude oil domestically is constrained by the limited and unreliable operation of its main refining asset, the Tema Oil Refinery. Although installed capacity exists, it has operated intermittently for years due to financial constraints, maintenance challenges and operational inefficiencies.

But expanding domestic refining capacity on its own won’t insulate Ghana from price dynamics. Domestic fuel prices remain linked to international benchmarks, meaning global oil shocks would continue to pass through to inflation.

Where refining could make a difference is on the financing side. It would lower demand for US dollars.

  • Weak storage infrastructure. Ghana has limited strategic storage capacity for petroleum products, reducing its ability to build reserves and manage supply over time. The country must rely on frequent imports to meet demand, increasing exposure to external supply and financing shocks.

  • An underdeveloped downstream petroleum sector. Beyond refining and storage, inefficiencies in the movement and sale of petroleum products constrain how effectively supply is managed within the domestic market. Distribution remains fragmented across importers, bulk distributors and retail outlets, with limited coordination and logistical bottlenecks in transportation and depot infrastructure. Regulatory rigidities in pricing and market participation further reduce flexibility. As a result, even when supply is available, it is not always efficiently allocated, and global price shocks are transmitted quickly and with limited buffering through the domestic economy.

What needs to be done

Four priorities now stand out.

First, recent gains must be consolidated through continued macroeconomic discipline and a firm avoidance of policy reversals.

Second, foreign-exchange buffers should be strengthened to better absorb future oil-price shocks and contain exchange-rate pressures.

Third, gold and foreign exchange strategies need to be integrated so that gold mobilisation directly reinforces external liquidity.

Finally, dependence on downstream imports must be reduced through credible investment in refining, storage and broader energy infrastructure.

The real test of Ghana’s fuel strategy is not whether it can withstand a single episode of oil-market volatility, but whether today’s stabilisation measures can be converted into a more resilient energy system.

– Ghana’s fuel payment strategy works for now: how to fix longer term problems
– https://theconversation.com/ghanas-fuel-payment-strategy-works-for-now-how-to-fix-longer-term-problems-281076