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African Leaders Launch Continental AI Ethics Fellowship

As artificial intelligence continues to spread across Africa’s healthcare, finance, education and public sectors, policymakers and technology experts are stepping up efforts to ensure the technology develops responsibly and does not outpace regulation.

In response to rising concerns around data privacy, algorithmic bias, misinformation and weak oversight, African institutions have unveiled a new continent-wide initiative focused on ethical AI governance and institutional capacity building.

The programme, known as the Pan-African AI Ethics and Governance Fellowship, was launched by the Policy Innovation Centre in partnership with the Africa Hub for Innovation & Development, with support from Luminate.

Organisers said the fellowship is intended to help African governments, institutions and professionals develop safer, more inclusive and accountable approaches to artificial intelligence as adoption of the technology accelerates across the continent.

The initiative comes at a time when AI systems are increasingly being integrated into key sectors such as agriculture, healthcare, financial services, education and governance, creating both economic opportunities and growing concerns over social risks.

According to the organisers, the fellowship seeks to address critical issues including misuse of personal data, lack of regulatory preparedness, automated discrimination and the exclusion of vulnerable populations from the benefits of digital innovation.

The 12-week virtual programme will bring together more than 50 mid- and senior-level participants from across Africa, including representatives from government institutions, regulatory bodies, academia, civil society groups, media organisations and private sector companies.

Participants are expected to undergo specialised training, mentorship sessions and policy labs designed to develop governance frameworks suited to African realities rather than relying entirely on imported regulatory models.

Executive Director of the Policy Innovation Centre, Osasuyi Dirisu, said the fellowship was created to ensure Africa becomes an active contributor to global conversations on AI governance instead of remaining a passive adopter of external policies.

“This Fellowship is designed to move beyond conversations on AI and focus on building practical governance capacity across African institutions,” Dirisu said during the launch event.

He added that the programme aims to nurture a new generation of African leaders capable of guiding the development and deployment of ethical AI systems that prioritise public interest and inclusivity.

The fellowship reflects a wider shift across Africa, where governments and institutions are increasingly trying to balance rapid technological adoption with safeguards capable of protecting citizens from unintended consequences linked to artificial intelligence.

Across the continent, debates around surveillance technologies, automated decision-making, misinformation, labour displacement and data ownership have become more urgent as AI adoption expands globally.

Although several African countries have introduced national AI strategies and digital transformation plans in recent years, experts say implementation remains inconsistent and institutional oversight is still weak in many jurisdictions.

Many analysts warn that without stronger governance structures, African economies risk becoming overly dependent on foreign AI systems and vulnerable to exploitative technology practices.

Chief Executive Officer of the Africa Hub for Innovation & Development, Kunle Kakanfo, said the fellowship would also help build stronger collaboration among African professionals working on similar policy and governance challenges.

“The fellowship for us is not just about leadership development in AI ethics and governance; it’s also about making significant connections, cross-country networks, and being able to cross-breed experience,” Kakanfo said.

He described the initiative as a platform capable of driving meaningful progress in ethical AI development across the continent.

The programme also reinforces Nigeria’s growing visibility within Africa’s digital policy ecosystem as the country positions itself as a major hub for technology innovation and AI governance discussions.

Speaking at the event, National Director of the National Centre for Artificial Intelligence and Robotics, Olubunmi Ajala, described the fellowship as part of Africa’s strategic response to one of the most significant technological transformations in modern history.

“This is a deliberate, organised, and urgent response of Africa to one of the most consequential technological revolutions in human history,” Ajala said.

He warned that failure to establish proper ethical and governance safeguards could lead to consequences extending far beyond technical failures.

“If we don’t do what we need to do in terms of governance and ethics, the problems will go beyond technology failures, and some of the damages could be colossal,” he added.

His remarks reflect wider global concerns surrounding generative AI systems and advanced machine learning technologies, particularly around transparency, accountability and the growing concentration of technological power among a few dominant international firms.

Participants in the fellowship said the programme offers an opportunity to close the widening gap between innovation and regulation within Africa’s rapidly changing digital economy.

Head of Product at Auto Check Africa, Ayobola Adedayo, said she hopes the initiative will strengthen understanding of responsible AI adoption and governance across the continent.

Meanwhile, Kenyan technology journalist Carol Odero said conversations around AI regulation are becoming increasingly necessary as some innovators continue to argue against oversight due to the technology’s early-stage development.

“I have spent a lot of time with innovators who think that AI should be left to run wild,” Odero said.

“But I would like to show them that there is a different path.

”Organisers noted that beyond the immediate training programme, the fellowship is expected to help establish a long-term network of African AI governance professionals capable of influencing future policy reforms, improving institutional oversight and promoting more equitable AI systems across the continent.

The initiative also reflects growing recognition that the future impact of artificial intelligence in Africa will depend not only on innovation itself, but also on the strength of the governance frameworks guiding its development and use.

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