Free State to outline challenges, solutions, in engagement with President Ramaphosa

Source: Government of South Africa

Free State to outline challenges, solutions, in engagement with President Ramaphosa

Free State Premier MaQueen Letsoha-Mathae has told SAnews.gov.za, that the provincial government’s engagement with President Cyril Ramaphosa and the National Executive today, presents an opportunity for the province to address its challenges.

The President will lead the engagement with the provincial government today, Friday, 27 March 2026, which is to be held at the University of Free State Centenary Complex in Bloemfontein, under the theme: “A Nation that Works for All”.

“It’s an opportunity for us to plead with them [because] we are having challenges in the province.

“We have an issue of the bucket system eradication in the province; an issue of human settlements where people are moving from one area to the other. We are also having an issue of infrastructure that is ageing and an issue of sewerage.

“We are happy that [Water and Sanitation] Minister Pemmy Majodina is always in our province, supporting this provincial government. So hopefully, we will get more Ministers who are saying: Premier, this is how we are going to support your provincial government,” the Premier said in an interview with SAnews.gov.za

President Ramaphosa has already held interactions with the provincial governments of KwaZulu-Natal, Limpopo, Mpumalanga, Gauteng, Eastern Cape, Northern Cape and the North West.

“The visit is aligned with President Ramaphosa’s commitment to encourage closer collaboration with Provinces and Local spheres of government to tackle service delivery challenges.

“This initiative accords with Section 154 of the Constitution, which mandates national and provincial governments to support and strengthen capacity of municipalities in governance,” the Presidency said in a statement, ahead of Friday’s engagement.

In his State of the Nation Address (SONA) in February, President Ramaphosa said government is proposing fundamental reforms to address the root causes of dysfunction in many municipalities and to improve the efficiency of service delivery.

At the time, the President said these changes are expected to be implemented in the coming months through the finalisation of the White Paper on Local Government. This as the White Paper is set to reimagine the way that local government works.

President Ramaphosa noted that the current local government system is overly complex and fragmented, placing excessive responsibilities on small and weak municipalities.

Government is also proposing more structured cooperation between municipalities and traditional and Khoi-San leadership institutions to strengthen community engagement and promote shared problem-solving.

“We will ensure that senior officials in local government have the required qualifications and are appointed through an independent process free from political interference.

“Where municipalities fail, we will strengthen the ability of national government to intervene more quickly and to direct corrective measures in the interests of serving our people better,” the President said.

Acknowledging that the reforms may be challenging, President Ramaphosa stressed that they are necessary.

He said progress has been made in stabilising eThekwini, resulting in renewed investor confidence. 

Meanwhile, Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (CoGTA) Minister Velenkosini Hlabisa earlier this month reaffirmed government’s commitment to supporting municipalities through policy reforms, including the review of the 1998 White Paper on Local Government, which is nearing completion, and ongoing work on municipal funding models and staffing frameworks.

Speaking at an engagement session with mayors of metropolitan municipalities, Hlabisa also emphasised that the success of metros is critical to the country’s overall stability, urging all spheres of government to work together to rebuild capable, accountable and responsive municipalities.

READ | Municipalities urged to strengthen governance systems, maintain public trust

“We are three spheres of government but one country. We will successfully overcome the obstacles that our metropolitan municipalities are currently facing by working together,” the Minister said at the time. – SAnews.gov.za

 

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President Ramaphosa visits Free State’s housing units

Source: Government of South Africa

President Ramaphosa visits Free State’s housing units

President Cyril Ramaphosa has, together with Human Settlements Minister Thembi Simelane, conducted a site visit to the Dark and Silver City Community Residential Units at the Mangaung Metro Municipality in the Free State. 

The project – which is aimed at providing low-income housing for thousands of citizens – has been faced with vandalism and challenges with contractors since it broke ground a little over 10 years ago.
 

Once construction is completed, the provincial government is expected to hand over the project to the municipality.

“This is the full process of renewal, reforms that we are instituting right across the disciplines and platforms across the country in the seventh administration.

“The determination and the rigour is there. You sense it. We are now entering a new phase of delivering human settlements in our country and we are now definitely on the move to eradicate the corruption that has dogged the construction of houses for our people and I can see it.

“What has been done in the past is completely unacceptable, but we are where we are. We are now changing approach,” President Ramaphosa said during a walkabout of the site on Thursday.

READ | Mangaung to begin Phase 2 of hostel redevelopment project

The President acknowledged the challenges that the project has faced but assured that government is working to resolve them.

“[We’ve] got the officials, the Ministers and the MECs and Premiers who are now showing greater determination to…getting to the root of the problems, have consequence management, the SIU [Special Investigating Unit] is investigating all the abandoned projects and we are moving unit by unit, block by block to ensure that we deliver housing to our people.

“Being here, at this site that was abandoned, is actually an abomination…and a complete neglect to the interests and rights of our people. With this, we ought to hang our heads in shame. But we are where we are now and we want to raise our gaze and make sure that we address the challenges and the problems and begin to deliver these houses to our people.

“Our people have been living for too long under…unacceptable accommodation and now we are opening a new window, a new chapter for them here. I’m glad to hear [that] there are almost 5 000 units [that] will now be occupied, and people will move in phase by phase until it’s fully occupied,” he added.
Provincial response 

Free State Premier MaQueen Letsoha-Mathae told SAnews.gov.za  that a facilitator has been appointed to oversee some parts of the project.

“These flats have been built for some time now, but I’m happy that this seventh administration is starting to engage with the department [and] with the municipality in making sure that this year, we hand over this project to the municipality.

“There is a facilitator that has been appointed here so we are urging our communities…to come and utilise this place [when occupancy is opened],” she said.

As a crowd gathered, some in protest and others seeking more information about the units, Mangaung Mayor Gregory Nthatisi, acknowledged that communication with community members on the completion of the construction has not always been up to par.

He told SAnews that authorities are hard at work to make sure that the construction is satisfactory before occupations can begin.

“In the past, when people were promised that they would come here, the communication level was not up to scratch. As a result, together with the province, we are now engaging the people around to explain how we can best utilise the properties here.

“We need to make sure that the contractors that do the work and were appointed by government stick to the specifications with regard to what has to happen so that by the time that the houses are handed over to the people, [the homes] are up to the level and expectation,” Nthatisi said. – SAnews.gov.za

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Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Meets US War Secretary

Source: Government of Qatar

Washington, March 26, 2026

HE Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al-Thani has held talks with HE United States Secretary of War Pete Hegseth to discuss strategic cooperation between the two countries.

The meeting took place in Washington on Thursday and focused on ways to support and develop defense and security collaboration amid regional challenges.

Both sides stressed the importance of continued coordination and consultation on regional issues to promote security and stability locally and internationally.

The transatlantic slave trade is the gravest crime against humanity – why the UN declaration matters

Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Kwasi Konadu, Professor in Africana & Latin American Studies, Colgate University

The resolution passed by United Nations General Assembly on 25 May 2026 seeking recognition of the transatlantic slave trade as the “gravest crime against humanity” potentially creates a broader definition of crimes against humanity in international law and allows for restitution claims against perpetrators. The resolution could elevate the legal and moral standard for what counts as the worst crimes against humanity, and compel more people to legally pursue reparations or compensation cases and thus deter such crimes.

Proposed by Ghana, it was adopted with 123 votes. The United States, Israel and Argentina voted against it. Fifty-two countries abstained, among them the UK and European states.

There has never been a single “gravest crime” designation applied to one human event or condition. Instead, international law defines categories of crimes considered the most serious. Examples are genocide, war crimes, crimes of aggression, and crimes against humanity. Being classified under these categories triggers severe legal consequences. These include global prosecution, lifelong accountability, international sanctions, and reparation claims.

Ghana’s declaration views transatlantic slavery and its system of forced African labour as the worst crime ever committed. It explains how millions of Africans were abducted, treated like property, and abused because of their race.

The declaration points out that the effects of slavery still influence inequality and racism today. It calls on all nations to recognise what happened, teach its history honestly, and remember the victims. It also works towards fixing the lasting damage, including institutional and monetary reparations.

I am a professor of history who has researched and written extensively on the slave trade and its impact. I argue that Ghana’s resolution represents more than a moral or diplomatic statement. It marks a decisive step in an ongoing effort of historical reclamation and political transformation. It asserts that the histories of enslavement, displacement and organised theft are foundational to the modern world.

More importantly, it insists that recognition must lead to action. For contemporary Africa, this moment is about leveraging historical truth to reshape present conditions and future possibilities within a global system still marked by the legacies of transatlantic slaving.

Slavery shaped the modern world

Transatlantic slaving was not an isolated historical episode but a foundational process that made the modern world. Between the 15th and 19th centuries, over 12 million Africans were forcibly removed from their homelands. It was a massive, organised system of theft that left African societies dealing with long-term demographic, political and economic disruptions.

During the 1800s slavery changed form. It became tied to European imperialism. Powerful nations such as Britain and France took over land in Africa and other regions. The countries that had been major slave traders became the leading imperial powers in Africa. For example, French forces in the late 1800s still captured people and forced them into service. Laws in French west Africa didn’t truly end slavery. They simply allowed colonial governments to take over land.

The colonising countries often claimed they were bringing “civilisation”. Similarly, European colonisers in central Africa – especially under Belgian rule in the Congo Free State (1885-1908) – caused massive suffering and death. Around 10 million people died over about 40 years.

The creation of diaspora communities

Over the course of transatlantic slaving, Africans participated, resisted, adapted, and preserved cultural and intellectual systems that would later shape diaspora communities and their bonds with Africa. Those bonds included shared historical experiences, cultural practices, religious systems, political ideas and intellectual traditions that travelled and transformed across the ocean.

Recent calls for reparatory justice emerge from this long-standing network of connections.

Ghana’s resolution comes out of a convergence of continental and diaspora political efforts. African states and Caribbean nations have increasingly coordinated their positions on historical injustice and reparations.

Ghana’s resolution was built on earlier declarations:

The Ghana declaration sets a precedent. It seeks to redefine the moral language of the international order. Elevating it as the gravest crime underscores slavery’s scale and duration. Its systemic nature establishes it as the fundamental architect of global capitalism, racial hierarchies and modern state formation.

Why it matters

The Ghana declaration recognises the centrality of transatlantic slavery and compels a reassessment of how modern inequalities are explained and addressed.

For contemporary Africa, this recognition carries material implications. The aftermath of transatlantic slaving are evident in patterns of underdevelopment, external dependency and unequal integration into global markets. A formal recognition at the highest level of international governance strengthens the basis for claims to reparatory justice.

Such claims may take multiple forms. These may include investment in infrastructure, education and health systems. There could also be reforms to global financial institutions that boost mobilising resources within African borders.

Equally significant is the resolution’s role in consolidating pan-African and diasporic solidarity. By aligning African states with Caribbean nations and broader diaspora communities, it reactivates a political consciousness rooted in shared histories and strategic alignments.

A unified transatlantic African bloc possesses greater leverage within – and outside – international institutions and can more effectively advocate for systemic transformation.

The Ghana resolution also functions as a global educational intervention. Public understanding of transatlantic slaving often remains fragmented or minimised. This is true particularly in regions where some groups or historical individuals benefited from it.

By placing this issue before the United Nations General Assembly, Ghana compels a broader confrontation with the scale and consequences of transatlantic slaving. This is essential for historical accuracy as well as for shaping near future policies and coordinated actions.

Resistance lies ahead

The resolution will face resistance. Some nations such as the United States and Great Britain remain wary of the legal and financial implications of a “gravest crime” recognition. The subject of reparations for them is contentious and untenable. These tensions reveal enduring asymmetries in global power and the difficulty of translating moral or historical claims into enforceable outcomes.

Yet resistance itself underscores the resolution’s significance. It exposes the extent to which historical injustices remain embedded in contemporary political and economic power arrangements.

– The transatlantic slave trade is the gravest crime against humanity – why the UN declaration matters
– https://theconversation.com/the-transatlantic-slave-trade-is-the-gravest-crime-against-humanity-why-the-un-declaration-matters-279218

Makemation: a Nollywood movie that shows AI in action in Africa

Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Tinashe Mushakavanhu, Assistant Professor, Harvard University

A new feature film, Makemation, is an African coming-of-age story set in a time of artificial intelligence (AI).

Makemation was produced by Nigerian AI-developer-turned-filmmaker Toyosi Akerele-Ogunsiji. As conversations about AI are dominated by external global powers, his film offers a different vantage point: an AI story rooted in African realities.


Read more: AI in Africa: 5 issues that must be tackled for digital equality


After a successful run in Nigerian cinemas in 2025, it’s now touring internationally and I attended a screening at the Harvard Center for African Studies. It was followed by a discussion with its producer and economist Ebehi Iyoha, who researches AI in Africa. The evening foregrounded precisely what the film so deftly dramatises: that the future of AI can also be imagined, contested and built on the African continent.

Makemation is about a young girl, Zara, who discovers AI as a tool not just for personal advancement, but for transforming her community. She must navigate poverty, gender expectations and limited access to science, technology, engineering and maths education. In the process, her journey becomes a powerful reflection on youth innovation, digital inclusion and the possibilities of homegrown technology in Africa.

As a scholar of literature and cultural studies, I see Makemation as a vital intervention that challenges the dominance of western techno-narratives. It places AI within local histories of inequality, aspiration and improvisation.

My work also examines popular media as cultural archives through which African futures are imagined and debated. Makemation expands the archive through which we study who gets to imagine and write African futures.

African tech futures

The title of the film is a blending of words that combines “make” and the suffix “–mation” to evoke ideas like automation, transformation and imagination. It captures the film’s central claim: that young Africans are not passive consumers of AI, but active makers of it.

Makemation asks: who gets to shape the AI revolution? Who benefits from it? And what does innovation look like in places where infrastructure is fragile? Where formal employment is scarce, and ingenuity is often born of necessity?

It does not treat Africa as a technological afterthought. Much of the global AI debate remains abstract and heavily mediated by the concerns of major technology companies or the governments of China and the US: existential risk, large language models, automation at scale.

These conversations, while important, often obscure the material realities of communities where access to electricity, stable internet or quality education cannot be taken for granted. In many African cities, largely informal and dynamic, young people are already improvising with technology in ways that challenge narrow definitions of innovation.

The cast of the educational film.

Makemation demonstrates this vividly. Informality is not depicted as absence or lack, but as a site of creativity. The protagonist captures this tension when she says, “My father is a welder and my mother sells akara (street food).” She goes on to explain that she believes education and innovation can create opportunities. Lines like this connect the film’s discussion of AI to everyday forms of labour, grounding its ideas in the realities of family, work, and aspiration.

In the discussion after the screening, Akerele-Ogunsiji spoke about the importance of storytelling in shaping technological futures. If narratives about AI continue to centre only a handful of geographies and demographics, they risk entrenching existing inequalities.

Africa’s youth bulge

Africa, according to the UN, is home to one of the youngest populations in the world. This demographic reality has profound implications for AI adoption, labour markets and education systems.

If supported by inclusive policies and meaningful access to digital tools, this film tells us, this generation could shape AI in ways that reflect local priorities rather than imported assumptions.

At the heart of the film lies a set of intertwined questions about access and privilege. Who has the bandwidth, literally and figuratively, to participate in AI development? Who has the confidence to imagine themselves as technologists?

The young protagonist’s journey is not simply about mastering code or winning a competition. It’s about negotiating gender expectations, economic precarity and the psychological barriers that tell many young African girls that technology is not for them.

In this sense, Makemation is as much about social infrastructure as it is about digital infrastructure. Mentorship, community support and visible role models matter. The film does not romanticise hardship. Instead, it shows how structural constraints shape technological possibility.


Read more: African languages for AI: the project that’s gathering a huge new dataset


Makemation works not only because of its idea but also because it is well made. The camera often stays close to the characters, and the soft colours create a reflective mood. The slow editing gives the story time to develop.

Its most important message is to destabilise the idea that meaningful AI conversations happen only in elite spaces. Makemation demonstrates that debates about AI technologies and opportunities that come with them are already unfolding in classrooms, community centres and informal neighbourhoods across Africa.

– Makemation: a Nollywood movie that shows AI in action in Africa
– https://theconversation.com/makemation-a-nollywood-movie-that-shows-ai-in-action-in-africa-277693

Ice Shock is a novel about passionate love in a time of climate crisis

Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Rodwell Makombe, Professor of English Literary and Cultural Studies, North-West University

South-African born writer and world literature scholar Elleke Boehmer’s sixth novel, Ice Shock, is a breathtaking story about two lovers who, soon after they meet, find themselves separated to pursue different career choices in different parts of the world.

Niall Lawrence spends 14 months at a polar institute in Antarctica while Leah Nash pursues a writing career in London. This relationship, which starts when the two meet on a London train, sets in motion a philosophical interrogation of love, career choice and the sustenance of both in a turbulent world.

Through this love story told across two continents, Boehmer paints, in broad strokes, a picture of a planet in crisis, reflected through the melting ice in Antarctica, the Fukushima disaster in Japan and the volcanic eruptions that disrupt global air travel.

Karavan Press

In this new world, the old distinctions between “here” and “there” – the centre and the periphery – are disrupted and new ways of inhabiting the planet are imagined. The changing climate intrudes into and disrupts private lives as Leah and Niall struggle to communicate across vast distances and in hostile weather conditions.

Ice Shock asks serious questions about choice, decision-making and the extent to which the unforeseen and the coincidental interrupt and change the courses of our lives. The central question is how the two manage to strike a balance between commitment to love and to career.

How is it that two people who are not looking for love become so strongly connected that their lives take a completely different turn? Is it possible some people are meant for each other? Soulmates?

Leah and Niall are entangled, we are told, like particles in quantum physics, which, once they have interacted, “remain intrinsically linked even when separated by astronomically large distances”. Their birthdays come one after the other – on 31 December and 1 January – and even their initials (NL and LN) interconnect.

As a literary scholar with an interest in travel and migration, I read my colleague’s new book as a radical re-examination of taken-for-granted distinctions such as north and south, here and there, us and them.

This book brings into sharp focus the urgency of the heating planet, showing that its effects are disrupting the most mundane human activities, incuding love relationships.

In Ice Shock, Boehmer combines the teasing style of romance fiction with the contemplative edge of a modernist novel to write about how both the global and the local are making an impact on the way people live, work and love.

Modernist novel

When I first read the book, my impression was “this is a modernist novel”. The modernist novel, which became popular at the turn of the 1900s, radically broke away from the traditional, realistic way of telling stories.

Modernist novels experimented with new narrative styles like stream of consciousness and fragmentation. Modernist writers such as Virginia Woolf and James Joyce wrote novels that were not only interested in telling stories but also engaging with ideas and exploring the minds of their characters.

The backdrop of Boehmer’s story (global disasters and a warming planet) mirrors the backdrop of the modernist novel (massive industrialisation, technological innovations and global catastrophe in the form of the first world war).


Read more: African sci-fi imagines new ways of living in climate-changed worlds


Ice Shock deploys a non-linear narrative style and an open-ended plot. Typical of the modernist novel, it refuses to speak about anything with certainty.

It recalls Woolf’s 1925 novel, Mrs Dalloway, not only because of how it explores, in explicit detail, the minds of the characters but also because of the intensity of the relationship between Niall and Leah. Like Niall in Ice Shock, Peter in Mrs Dalloway loves Clarissa to the point of suffocation.

Epic love story

Ice Shock seems to ask the basic question about what it means to love. Is love the intense emotional connection between two people? Is it sacrifice? Faithfulness? Can one love without being faithful?

This is not only a story about the beauty of love but also the pain of it. Niall and Leah may be entangled like particles in quantum physics, but they are still human beings susceptible to human frailties.


Read more: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s new book Dream Count explores love in all its complicated messiness


They enter into and keep various flirtatious relationships and fateful romantic entanglements from each other and, somehow, readers are complicit because we do not want to see the lovebirds separate.

Still, they remain powerfully connected. The constant friction between them seems to be the fuel that keeps them going. Boehmer suggests that love, especially between soulmates, thrives in a state of constant but productive tension.

Leah is a free-spirited, self-driven personality while Niall is thoughtful and considerate. They both know and understand each other telepathically, without words. Across vast distances, they communicate with each other through the stars and the moon.

In her review of Ice Shock, South African literary scholar Barbara Boswell describes it as “a novel saturated with extremes”.


Read more: Johannesburg’s underbelly is explored in Niq Mhlongo’s fresh new novel about a messy break-up


The lovers know their relationship is moving too fast, but they do not know how to slow it down. Is this a reflection of the preoccupation with speed in the contemporary world or the fast pace with which the planet is warming?

Perhaps the question that Boehmer is asking is how much love is enough to maintain a healthy relationship. Ice Shock is an intrusive novel that captures the inner thoughts (and reflections) of the characters in a way that blurs the distinction between fiction and reality, self and other.

Burning planet

Niall and Leah’s intense, ferocious love affair, in a sense, mirrors the seemingly irreversible catastrophe of global warming – as if to say, we all know the effects of unsustainable human activity on the planet but somehow, we keep going with the same ferocity and intensity. Leah and Niall’s love, like the warming planet, has no reverse gear.

Ice Shock is an attempt to rethink and rewrite how we inhabit the planet.

– Ice Shock is a novel about passionate love in a time of climate crisis
– https://theconversation.com/ice-shock-is-a-novel-about-passionate-love-in-a-time-of-climate-crisis-277016

Statement of the Chairperson of the African Union (AU) Commission on the Adoption of United Nations (UN) General Assembly Resolution A/80/L.48 declaring the trafficking of enslaved Africans and racialized chattel enslavement of Africans as the gravest crime against humanity

Source: APO

The Chairperson of the African Union Commission warmly welcomes the adoption by the United Nations General Assembly of resolution A/80/L.48, led by the Republic of Ghana, declaring the trafficking of enslaved Africans and racialized chattel enslavement of Africans as the gravest crime against humanity.

The AUC Chairperson commends H.E. the President of the Republic of Ghana for this important leadership, which reflects Africa’s longstanding and principled call for the full recognition of the slave trade and its enduring consequences.

“This historic decision marks an important step toward truth, justice, and healing, and reinforces the urgent need to address the enduring legacy of slavery,” the Chairperson stated.

The AUC Chairperson reiterated the African Union’s call for comprehensive acknowledgment of the historical and contemporary impacts of slavery, including the pursuit of reparative justice, in line with Agenda 2063 and relevant Assembly decisions.

The African Union remains committed to working with the United Nations, Member States, and partners to advance historical justice and ensure that such crimes are neither forgotten nor repeated.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Union (AU).

Media files

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Advisor to Prime Minister and Official Spokesperson for Ministry of Foreign Affairs Meets EU Special Representative for Gulf Region

Source: Government of Qatar

Doha, March 26, 2026

Advisor to the Prime Minister and Official Spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Dr. Majid bin Mohammed Al Ansari met Thursday with HE European Union Special Representative for the Gulf Region Luigi Di Maio, who is visiting the country.
The meeting discussed the developments of the military escalation in the region and its serious repercussions on regional and international security and stability. It also discussed ways to resolve all disputes by peaceful means, in addition to ways to enhance joint cooperation under the current circumstances.
The Advisor to the Prime Minister and Official Spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs voiced the State of Qatar’s appreciation for the partnership with the EU, especially in light of the current circumstances, particularly in the defense and security fields.
In turn, HE the EU Special Representative for the Gulf Region expressed his solidarity with the State of Qatar following the repeated attacks on its sovereignty, noting the importance of consolidating security and stability in the region. 

Minister of State at Ministry of Foreign Affairs Meets EU Special Representative for the Gulf Region

Source: Government of Qatar

Doha | March 26, 2026

HE Minister of State at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Dr. Mohammed bin Abdulaziz bin Saleh Al Khulaifi met today with HE European Union (EU) Special Representative for the Gulf Region Luigi Di Maio, who is currently visiting the country.

During the meeting, the developments of the military escalation in the region and its serious repercussions on regional and international security and stability were reviewed, as well as ways to resolve all disputes by peaceful means.

HE Minister of State at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs affirmed the State of Qatar’s support for efforts aimed at an immediate cessation of any escalatory actions, a return to the negotiating table, prioritizing reason and wisdom to contain the crisis, and enhancing security and stability in the region.

Afreximbank lance la première cohorte de l’Accelerator Programme en vue de développer l’écosystème du commerce numérique africain

Source: Africa Press Organisation – French

La Banque Africaine d’Import-Export (Afreximbank) (www.Afreximbank.com) a officiellement lancé la première cohorte de l’Afreximbank Accelerator Programme, qui réunit huit start-ups à fort potentiel issues de toute l’Afrique et de la diaspora pour une semaine de lancement intensive qui se tiendra au Caire du 23 au 27 mars 2026. 

Sélectionnée parmi plus de 1 600 candidatures, cette cohorte regroupe certaines des entreprises les plus prometteuses du continent qui développent des infrastructures numériques pour le commerce intra-africain. Ces start-ups évoluent dans des secteurs clés tels que les paiements transfrontaliers, la logistique numérique, les plateformes d’exportation agricole, les solutions d’entreprise axées sur l’IA, le financement de la chaîne d’approvisionnement et la mobilisation des investissements de la diaspora. 

Participent à cette cohorte les startups Fincart.io (Égypte) ; OnePort 365 qui est présente au Nigeria, au Ghana et au Kenya ; Timon (entité panafricaine présente dans 15 pays) ; Zowasel (Nigeria, Kenya et Tanzanie) ; Gebeya (entité éthiopienne et panafricaine) ; Fluna (startup panafricaine présente dans 10 pays) ; Capsa Technologies (Nigeria) ; et Daba Finance qui couvre l’Afrique francophone. 

Dans le cadre de ce programme, conçu, développé et mis en œuvre par Afreximbank, les startups éligibles bénéficieront d’un investissement pouvant atteindre 250 000 dollars US, sous réserve de critères d’investissement standard et d’une vérification préalable. Ce soutien sera complété par un accompagnement, un accès au marché et des partenariats stratégiques visant à accélérer leur expansion en Afrique.

La semaine de lancement au Caire, qui a débuté au siège d’Afreximbank le 24 mars 2026, est marquée par une série d’échanges de haut niveau avec la direction de la Banque, des experts du secteur, des mentors et des partenaires de l’écosystème. Cette semaine s’achèvera par une soirée de réseautage exclusive au Grand Musée égyptien, reliant symboliquement le riche patrimoine de l’Afrique à son avenir en matière d’innovation et en pleine mutation. 

Façonner l’avenir du commerce numérique de l’Afrique 

S’exprimant lors de la réunion de lancement, M. Haytham Elmaayergi, vice-président exécutif  d’Afreximbank, en charge de Global Trade Bank, a souligné l’importance de l’événement : « Aujourd’hui, nous passons de la promesse à l’action, car nous comprenons une vérité fondamentale : le commerce ne se fait pas sur le papier des documents politiques. Le commerce se réalise grâce aux entreprises. Il se réalise grâce aux entrepreneurs. Il se réalise grâce aux bâtisseurs. Ce qui m’enthousiasme le plus chez cette cohorte, ce n’est pas seulement qui vous êtes, mais ce que vous représentez. Vous construisez les infrastructures numériques qui définiront la manière dont l’Afrique commercera au XXIe siècle ». 

Il a ajouté : « L’Accelerator Programme s’inscrit dans une ambition bien plus large : une Afrique où les start-ups se développent naturellement à l’échelle du continent, où les entreprises commercent sans difficulté au-delà des frontières, et où le continent fonctionne comme une véritable force économique intégrée. Afreximbank est fière d’être un partenaire, un facilitateur et une partie prenante engagée dans le succès de la prochaine génération de champions du commerce africains ». 

Outre les sessions principales, les huit start-ups ont rencontré le Président d’Afreximbank, Dr George Elombi, ainsi que l’équipe de direction, pour assister à des séances d’information animées par des experts sur divers sujets.

L’Accelerator Programme offre une proposition de valeur unique en combinant : 

  • Un accès direct au réseau panafricain d’Afreximbank, composé de gouvernements, d’institutions financières, d’entreprises et de partenaires commerciaux ; 
  • Des opportunités d’accès aux marchés et de facilitation des transactions sur les principaux corridors commerciaux africains ; 
  • Des conseils en matière de réglementation et de politique, tirant parti des relations de la Banque avec les banques centrales et les régulateurs ;
  • Des voies d’intégration dans l’écosystème de commerce numérique de la Banque, notamment l’Africa Trade Gateway (ATG) et le Système panafricain de paiement et de règlement (PAPSS).

Cette approche positionne Afreximbank comme un catalyseur stratégique du commerce transfrontalier et à l’échelle continentale, aidant les jeunes entreprises à s’orienter dans les procédures d’autorisation, de conformité et d’accès aux marchés dans de multiples juridictions. En outre, la Banque joue un rôle central dans le développement de l’écosystème du commerce numérique africain, en combinant accès aux marchés, partenariats et infrastructures pour soutenir la croissance de solutions évolutives à l’échelle du continent.

Ce programme souligne le rôle croissant d’Afreximbank en tant que catalyseur de l’écosystème du commerce et de l’innovation en Afrique, en fournissant une plateforme structurée pour identifier et développer des projets à fort impact. Grâce à cette initiative, la Banque contribue activement au développement de l’infrastructure numérique qui sous-tend la mise en œuvre de l’accord sur la la Zone de libre-échange continentale africaine (ZLECAf), se positionnant ainsi à l’avant-garde des efforts visant à stimuler le commerce intra-africain, l’intégration des marchés et la transformation économique à travers le continent. 

Les huit jeunes entreprises opèrent dans plus de 15 pays africains, couvrant les principaux corridors commerciaux d’Afrique de l’Ouest, de l’Est, du Nord et australe.  Leur dynamisme témoigne de l’ampleur et du potentiel de l’innovation africaine. Fluna a facilité plus de 50 millions de dollars US d’échanges commerciaux dans 10 pays. Capsa a traité plus de 70 milliards de nairas dans le domaine du financement de la chaîne d’approvisionnement. OnePort 365 relie les corridors commerciaux Nigeria-Ghana-Kenya. Timon prend en charge les paiements dans 15 pays et prévoit de s’étendre à 40 pays, tandis que Zowasel a mis en relation plus de 4 000 coopératives et entreprises agroalimentaires vérifiées. 

Ensemble, ces entreprises construisent les infrastructures numériques du commerce intra-africain, accélèrent la mise en œuvre de la ZLECA et ouvrent de nouvelles voies pour l’intégration économique à travers le continent et le réseau Global Africa (Afrique mondiale) au sens large.

Distribué par APO Group pour Afreximbank.

Contact Presse :
Vincent Musumba
Responsable des communications et de la gestion événementielle (Relations presse)
Courriel : press@afreximbank.com

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À propos d’Afreximbank :
La Banque Africaine d’Import-Export (Afreximbank) est une institution financière multilatérale panafricaine dédiée au financement et à la promotion du commerce intra et extra-africain. Depuis 30 ans, Afreximbank déploie des structures innovantes pour fournir des solutions de financement qui facilitent la transformation de la structure du commerce africain et accélèrent l’industrialisation et le commerce intrarégional, soutenant ainsi l’expansion économique en Afrique. Fervente défenseur de l’Accord sur la Zone de Libre-Échange Continentale Africaine (ZLECAf), Afreximbank a lancé les le Système panafricain de paiement et de règlement (PAPSS) qui a été adopté par l’Union africaine (UA) comme la plateforme de paiement et de règlement devant appuyer la mise en œuvre de la ZLECAf. En collaboration avec le Secrétariat de la ZLECAf et l’UA, la Banque a mis en place un Fonds d’ajustement de 10 milliards de dollars US pour aider les pays à participer de manière effective à la ZLECAf. À la fin de décembre 2024, le total des actifs et des garanties de la Banque s’élevait à environ 40,1 milliards de dollars US et les fonds de ses actionnaires s’établissaient à 7,2 milliards de dollars US. Afreximbank est notée AAA par China Chengxin International Credit Rating Co., Ltd (CCXI), A par GCR, A- par Japan Credit Rating Agency (JCR)  et Baa2 par Moody’s. Au fil des ans, Afreximbank est devenue un groupe constitué de la Banque, de sa filiale de financement à impact appelée Fonds de développement des exportations en Afrique (FEDA), et de sa filiale de gestion d’assurance, AfrexInsure, (les trois entités forment « le Groupe »). La Banque a son siège social au Caire, en Égypte.

Pour de plus amples informations, veuillez visiter www.Afreximbank.com

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