MWC Kigali 2025: Kagame advocates for bold, competitive African digital innovation

Hosted at the Kigali Convention Centre from October 21-23, the event, themed Converge, Connect and Create, has drawn over 4,000 delegates from 109 countries.

In his keynote address, President Kagame highlighted Africa’s rapid shift from limited connectivity to a mobile-driven economy, citing mobile money as a global model of financial inclusion that has empowered small businesses, women entrepreneurs, and rural communities.

“Innovation does not belong to one part of the world alone,” he said. “It can emerge anywhere from anyone given the chance.”

Yet, he warned that only a fraction of Africans are connected compared to the global average, risking wider inequality if the gap persists.

President Kagame emphasised Rwanda’s vision to build a knowledge-based economy, integrating artificial intelligence (AI) into planning, research, and public service delivery to boost productivity and inclusivity.

He called for harmonized policies across governments, private sectors, and partners like the African Union and Smart Africa to create a single digital market, enabling secure data and payment systems to connect economies continent-wide.

Echoing President Kagame’s vision, ICT Minister Paula Ingabire showcased Rwanda’s digital strides, noting that active mobile users surged from 500,000 in 2023 to 5 million 4G users by June 2025, driven by public-private partnerships and reforms to lower costs and expand infrastructure.

She highlighted Rwanda’s launch of 5G services through MTN Rwanda, 60GB of secured internet capacity, and connectivity for nearly 1,000 health facilities and 4,000 schools.

Minister Ingabire underscored the training of 4.5 million citizens in digital literacy, emphasising that “the future of digital innovation in Africa will be defined by collaboration.”

She urged the creation of African-designed solutions, scalable globally, to position the continent as a home of digital excellence.

Vivek Badrinath, Director General of the GSMA, praised Rwanda’s leadership, noting that mobile operators now cover 99% of the country, enabling nearly 13 million connections.

“Rwanda reminds us that progress is not an aspiration; it is a deliberate choice,” he said, aligning the event with Africa’s Agenda 2063 for a prosperous, connected continent.

Badrinath highlighted mobile technology’s role in advancing education, healthcare, and financial services, while acknowledging the work needed to ensure universal access to mobile internet.

During the event, GSMA, which organises the conference in collaboration with the Ministry of ICT, highlighted three urgent priorities for policymakers: handset affordability, inclusive artificial intelligence (AI) language models, and energy resilience, calling for bold policy reforms and investments to advance Africa’s digital transformation.

“Africa’s mobile sector is one of the most dynamic in the world, but we must tackle persistent barriers such as high device costs, energy availability issues and the lack of inclusive AI. By working together, governments, industry and development partners can make digital inclusion affordable, sustainable and meaningful for every African,” Vivek stated.

MWC Kigali 2025’s thought leadership programme centres on four themes: building a Connected Continent through affordable connectivity and 5G expansion; exploring The AI Future to boost Africa’s economic growth; advancing Fintech to deepen financial inclusion; and highlighting Africa’s Digital Frontier, where innovations in health, education, and entertainment are redefining the continent’s progress.

President Paul Kagame opened the Mobile World Congress (MWC) Kigali 2025 with a clarion call for a "bold, connected, and competitive" Africa, urging global leaders, innovators, and policymakers to harness technology to bridge the continent’s digital divide and unlock its vast potential.
 ICT Minister Paula Ingabire showcased Rwanda's digital strides, noting that active mobile users surged from 500,000 in 2023 to 5 million 4G users by June 2025, driven by public-private partnerships and reforms to lower costs and expand infrastructure.
Vivek Badrinath, Director General of the GSMA, praised Rwanda’s leadership, noting that mobile operators now cover 99% of the country, enabling nearly 13 million connections.
The conference, themed Converge,  Connect and Create, has drawn over 4,000 delegates from 109 countries.
Innovations such as robotics are among those being showcased at the MWC 2025 summit.

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