General News of Friday, 5 June 2026

Source: www.ghanaweb.com

'Africa must fund its own digital future or risk dependence’ - Dr. Apaak

Clement Abas Apaak is the Deputy Minister for Education Clement Abas Apaak is the Deputy Minister for Education

Deputy Minister for Education, Clement Abas Apaak, has said that Africa must invest in its own digital infrastructure and expertise if it hopes to achieve technological independence.

Speaking at the ministerial roundtable discussion at the eLearning Africa conference at the Labadi Beach Hotel in Accra on Wednesday, June 3, 2026, he noted the lack of African-owned digital infrastructure as one of the greatest obstacles to the continent's technological ambitions.

"So for me that is the biggest challenge that we ought to be addressing, where we can mobilise our own resources to build our own infrastructure, train our own experts as part of the effort to domesticate AI in a way that would protect our history, our culture, and our value systems," he said.

According to him, Africa must take deliberate steps to ensure emerging technologies reflect the continent's interests and values rather than relying solely on external actors.

He further cautioned that ambitious digital transformation plans would remain difficult to achieve without adequate financial commitment from African governments.

"Thinking through all that we have said, fantastic ideas, very worthy of implementation, but Madam Chair, without the resources, how far can we go?" he asked.

Apaak further questioned whether reliance on foreign technology companies would enable African countries to exercise genuine control over their digital future.

‘Very troubling!’ – Pratt wades into Asiedu Nketiah-Haruna Iddrisu brouhaha

"If we are going to depend on the same entities whose agendas we cannot tell, do you really think that will allow us to be independent and to use technology the way we want to?" he said.

The Deputy Minister of Education proposed establishing a continental funding mechanism to support the development of digital infrastructure across Africa.

"So in my own thinking, part of what we should be looking at is to get African governments to commit at least about 1-2% of their annual GDP towards a pool or a fund that would support the building of the continental-level digital infrastructure," he stated.

He explained that such an investment would help lay the foundation for domesticating digital technology and artificial intelligence across the continent.

Apaak also pointed to the global imbalance in the technology sector, noting that Africa has yet to produce one of the world's leading technology giants.

"Because if out of the ten global giants in the area of technology, not even one is African, nine are American, and if our emails have to still bounce off Europe and America to get to us, then what is really our basis for trying to assert some semblance of independence?" he asked.

He urged African leaders to mobilise resources and work collectively to secure the continent's digital future.

ANAS/VPO

'My life is gone' Tudu fire victim recounts total loss in blaze