General News of Friday, 5 June 2026

Source: www.ghanaweb.com

Apaak urges African leaders to respond to American dominance of tech industry

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

Deputy Minister for Education, Clement Abas Apaak, has called on African leaders to scale up investment in digital infrastructure to reduce the continent's dependence on foreign technology companies and strengthen its digital independence.

Speaking during a ministerial roundtable discussion at the eLearning Africa Conference held at the Labadi Beach Hotel in Accra on Wednesday, June 4, 2026, he expressed concern about Africa's limited presence among the world's leading technology companies and the implications for the continent's technological future.

"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 said the situation underscores the urgent need for African countries to invest in infrastructure that would allow them to take greater control of their technological future.

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He noted that such a fund could provide the foundation needed to domesticate digital technology and ensure that AI development reflects African realities and priorities.

According to Apaak, building continental digital infrastructure should be a priority if Africa is to fully benefit from advances in artificial intelligence and other emerging technologies.

"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 said.

He further stressed the importance of developing local expertise and institutions capable of driving innovation across the continent.

"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 stated.

Apaak also questioned whether Africa could achieve genuine independence while relying on technology platforms and systems controlled outside the continent.

"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 asked.

However, he urged African governments to work together to mobilise resources and build the infrastructure needed to secure the continent's digital future.

ANAS/VPO

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