Liquid Technologies Becomes Africa’s Largest Independent Network Provider, Hits 100,000 km Milestones

With a large expanse of  fibre infrastructure that impacts more than 100 million people across 643 towns and cities in Africa, Liquid Intelligent Technologies, a digital solutions provider Liquid Intelligent Technologies achieves the 100,000 km fibre network milestone, positioning the organisation as the largest independent fibre network provider in emerging markets globally.

Liquid has been manoeuvring steadily through Africa, investing in increasing its reach, which it has successfully done, moving the dial from 89,989 km at the beginning of 2021 to reach this new milestone now.

Nic Rudnick, Group Chief Executive Officer, Liquid Intelligent Technologies
Nic Rudnick, Group Chief Executive Officer, Liquid Intelligent Technologies

With its additional fibre network connecting 14 countries, primarily in Sub-Saharan Africa, customers can now explore opportunities in Africa and across the US, Asian and European markets.

Read also:Nigeria’s Terragon Verified as Leader in Data and Marketing Technology

The organisation’s fibre infrastructure impacts more than 100 million people across 643 towns and cities on the continent.

This extensive network will create new opportunities by making digital inclusion a reality for businesses and individuals across the continent and ultimately accelerating the ongoing digital transformation in Africa.

This well-earned achievement has not come without the extensive effort and drive that followed Liquid’s initial vision and growth plan, as noted by Nic Rudnick, Group Chief Executive Officer, Liquid Intelligent Technologies.

“Over the years we have been successfully connecting countries through our high-speed connectivity and digital services.

Read also:How WhatsApp Business API is Changing SMEs Journey in Kenya

Our successful partnerships with customers ensured that today we are recognised as a technology company that has brought local businesses access to Cloud capabilities, world-class Cyber Security solutions in addition to our existing telecoms and connectivity capability”.

Accomplishing one achievement after the next, Liquid recently expanded its operations in the Democratic Republic of Congo, bringing its world-class fibre network and digital services to a country that previously relied only on expensive mobile broadband.

For the first time, 2.7 million people of Mbuji-Mayi in the DRC will have access to fibre connectivity, creating an environment that stimulates exciting new sector growth opportunities.

Knowing that connectivity is vital for Africa’s economic growth, the extended penetration will also enable small businesses, enterprises, and government entities to increase their competitiveness through the many digital solutions catering to their individual needs.

Read also:Nigeria’s Central Bank Raises Capital Requirements for Payment Solutions Service Providers $609,000

Rudnick said, “The internet offers unprecedented opportunities for economic growth in developing countries. By providing access to information, connecting people to businesses everywhere, and opening up new markets, the internet can act as an enabler of economic activity and an engine for information sharing. Economic development is not about choosing between access to the internet and basic necessities, they need to work together to allow societies to flourish”.

According to Deloitte, it is estimated that by extending internet penetration, another 640 million children may access the internet and the wealth of information it makes available while they study.

With only a 20% internet penetration in Africa, the internet plays a pivotal role in extending access to educational resources and accelerating knowledge sharing among students and teachers.

It improves the quality of offline education, resulting in better school performance with online learning resources.

As a result of education improvement, young people are more employable, and improved literacy promotes social inclusion and benefits the economy.

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry

Vodacom Partners Mdundo to Launch New Premium Music Bundle in Tanzania

Vodacom Tanzania’s head of Value Added Services, Nguvu Kamando

Vodacom Tanzania has announced a new partnership with African music distributing and streaming service Mdundo in a move that will take music bundle for Vodacom’s subscribers to another level, giving subscribers’ unimpeded access to Mdundo’s premium service as well as a bevy of curated mixes from some of Tanzania’s top DJs.

Speaking on the development, Vodacom Tanzania’s head of Value Added Services, Nguvu Kamando, said  that “Instead of struggling and moving from one platform to another, we as a digital valuing company, saw the importance of creating one bundle which will include all music genres, that’s why we also decided to partner with Mdundo.com”.

Vodacom Tanzania’s head of Value Added Services, Nguvu Kamando
Vodacom Tanzania’s head of Value Added Services, Nguvu Kamando

This partnership will go a long way in expanding the reach of Mdundo, Kenyan music distribution and streaming service to be a one-stop solution for music lovers in Africa to enjoy free, unlimited access to their favourite songs and artists.  

Read also:South Africa’s Telkom Group Records Growth in Mobile Business

Founded in 2012, the Kenyan music monetization platform, co-founded by a Danish native Martin Nielsen, is currently operating in 10 countries across the continent with hopes to continue expansion throughout Africa.

Launching officially in 2013 the company has been on a steady incline since, having partnered with big names such as Airtel and Microsoft in the past. CEO and co-founder Nielsen says that growing the business hasn’t been too difficult since the Kenyan music industry lacked a solid online distribution and monetisation platform.

Mdundo, meaning “beat” in Swahili, offers listeners two subscription options. Namely, a free version, and a “premium” paid version at the value of about $1.09 monthly. Though Mdundo makes most of its income via advertising. The company has a strong focus on making it simple for new artists to join the platform and sell their music. Though, as Nielsen says, it has not always been so easy to find the right payment methods to integrate into their service.

“Trying to start a streaming service in Kenya was not easy, especially in finding ways to bill customers. M-Pesa, the mobile payment service, was pervasive at the time the company started and the hope was that it could be used as a mode of payment for Mdundo’s services,” Nielsen is quoted by JMExclusives.

Read also:Starting With Ethiopia And Tanzania, This Company Is Migrating African Countries To Blockchain Technology

“The billing options were few if you looked continent-wide,” Nielsen says. “It is only recently that we got the M-Pesa push SDK (software development kit). M-Pesa has not been focusing online but on retail merchants, and if you go outside of Kenya there are even fewer options.”

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry

How Ghana’s Social Bond Could Influence Africa

There are expectations that Ghana’s $1 Billion social bond could kickstart similar developments across Africa according to industry experts. Speaking on this development, Charles Adu Boahen, Ghana’s minister of State for Finance, “With this issue we’re looking at refinancing those debts already raised to undertake projects in the environmental and social sectors.”

Charles Adu Boahen, Ghana’s minister of State for Finance
Charles Adu Boahen, Ghana’s minister of State for Finance

A social bond is a debt instrument used to raise funds for projects with positive social outcomes, such as in education, healthcare, and food security. Its issuance is on an upward trajectory globally, as investors combine profit and mission to tackle inequalities. This type of bond reached record levels last year, increasing sevenfold, and this year, it’s expected to grow by 6% to $150 billion in funds raised.

Read also:Ghana’s Real Estate VR Tours Startup DOBIISON Scales Operations

According to Churchill Ogutu, head of research at Genghis Capital in Nairobi, many more countries in Africa are likely to follow Ghana’s example, because of the pandemic’s devastating impact on tax revenues, and the need to fund critical social sectors.

The African Development Bank has been active in this space. It launched a social bond program in 2017 and has so far issued five such bonds, the latest being a SEK2.5 billion ($3 billion) debt instrument to fight Covid-19.

On a country level, African states have been left behind in the social bond trend, as they typically issue bonds to fund debt obligations and heavy infrastructure projects, not social change. Lately, they have had plenty of success funding debt and infrastructure through euro-denominated bonds. Ogutu says the high global demand for social bonds comes from increased emphasis by investors on environmental, social, and governance standards, or ESGs, which are used to measure the sustainability and societal impact of investments.

Read also:Africa’s Business Heroes Renews Calls For Applications From African Entrepreneurs

“They [investors] want to go into those morally right projects,” Ogutu says, “and that’s where the social sectors tick the boxes.

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry

Moroccan Startup Launches Local Market Model, Hopeful of Growth

One of Morocco’s emerging B2B e-commerce startup WaystoCap says it has seen strong growth uptake since launching cross-border marketplace to focusing more locally instead. WaystoCap which is a Y Combinator graduate has seen enormous potential through a platform that allows African businesses to buy and sell products, helping them to discover products, verify them, obtain financing and insurance, manage their shipments, and ensure payments security.

WaystoCap CEO Niama El Bassunie
WaystoCap CEO Niama El Bassunie

WaystoCap CEO Niama El Bassunie, said that “After graduating from Y Combinator in 2017 at WaystoCap we were focused on an African cross-border marketplace. In 2020 we pivoted our model, moving from a focus on cross-border to local marketplaces in Morocco, Ivory Coast, and Togo focused on retailers,”

“The reason for the pivot was as a result of much iteration where we came to the conclusion that the pure cross-border marketplace that we launched in 2017 was not best for servicing the small and medium sized business needs in Africa, and was rather just working through more middlemen.”

Read also:South Africa’s Telkom Group Records Growth in Mobile Business

WaystoCap realised that the best way to enable these businesses and help them with their growth was by focusing on the tools that would allow them to do so through an online marketplace connecting them with brands, manufacturers and suppliers, and resolving their daily procurement needs.

The new platform includes an online marketplace with access to thousands of products, a digital inventory management solution, access to working capital leveraging historical data, and solutions for resolving daily procurement hassles and associated logistics. Once WaystoCap started piloting the model, it caught on quickly.

“In less than a year it’s grown significantly into a network of over 10,000 retailers with thousands of products available through one mobile application,” El Bassunie said. “Our marketplace has been a game changer for them as we turn these traditional retailers into modern superstores.”

It is also extending the reach of sellers into new markets, which allowed WaystoCap to grow by a multiple of 30 in 2020. This rapid growth is continuing in 2021.

Read also:A New 10-Year Master Plan Launched By Ghana SEC Has Huge Plans For Fintech, Venture Capital And Blockchain

“Just as B2C was digitised in the last two decades, now we are bringing technology to an archaic and disorganised industry, working with millions of retailers all over the continent to leapfrog the way things are done today, and bring the clarity and empowerment technology can offer,” said El Bassunie.

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry

Nigeria May Embrace Digital Currency

Cryptos

The Nigerian government has admitted that it may embrace digital currency in future. This was made known by the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria Mr. Godwin Emefiele said  this during the 279th Monetary Policy Review meeting held in Abuja, even as he assured Nigerians that digital currencies will have a place in the country.

Cryptos
Cryptos

According to the apex bank’s boss, the Central Bank has been working on the possibility of digital currency and has “Carried out our investigation and we found out that a substantial percentage of our people are getting involved in cryptocurrency which is not the best. Don’t get me wrong, some may be legitimate but most are illegitimate.”

“Under cryptocurrency and Bitcoin, Nigeria comes 2nd while in the global side of the economy, Nigeria comes 27th. We are still conducting our investigation and we will make our data available.”

Read also:Ukheshe Plans to Expand its Payment Solutions to Asia-Pacific

Emefiele said that the concerns of the apex bank have been echoed by the CEO of Tesla, Elon Musk’s uncertainty as an example.  

“We saw the market collapse. Initially, Elon Musk tweeted around the time when we said our banking and payment facilities are no longer available for cryptocurrency transactions and he tweeted that he will invest $1.5 billion and the price (Bitcoin) went up. He now tweeted and raised a few concerns and the thing (Cryptocurrency) plunged.”

After stating his concerns, the CBN governor went on to say, “We are committed to the CBN and I can assure everybody that digital currency will come to life even in Nigeria.”

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry

How Investors Can Conduct Remote Due Diligence On Startups — Catalyst Fund

Remote Due Diligence

Catalyst Fund, a global accelerator that supports inclusive tech innovators and facilitates the growth of innovation ecosystems in emerging markets, has released a guide on how investors can effectively conduct remote due diligence on startups before investing. The guide which seeks to help investors assess startups, shares insights into three product areas that can support inclusive recovery and build.

Remote Due Diligence
Remote Due Diligence

What Does The Guide Recommend?

Broadly, the guide reviews critical areas to focus due diligence efforts on, and they include: team, product, market, financials.

On Team

The guide notes that many early-stage investors note they invest in innovators and leaders, and not in a product, as that product is likely to evolve significantly as the team works to achieve product-market fit.

“In some ways, the pandemic itself provided investors valuable information about a critical aspect of leadership: evidence of how the team reacts under pressure. Investors had a firsthand, realtime view into how teams handle changing circumstances — from new regulation to disrupted field operations to decreases in user purchasing power. Some told us that surviving the pandemic itself was an extremely strong signal of leadership resilience and resourcefulness,” the guide notes.

Recommendations On Team

On team, the guide makes the following recommendations:

  • Observe team dynamics during video calls — the guide exerts investors to note how team members interact with each other, the level of control the CEO has, whether teams have clear areas of responsibility, and whether the CEO delegates questions to them appropriately.
  • Vary the format and tone of video calls — The guide advises investors to interact with the founders in different environments and learn more about them, try to vary the format of conversations. The rapidfire Question & Answer session at the end of the pitch gives them insights into how the founders perform under pressure.
  • Probe leadership capabilities in hard times — On this, the guide notes questions such as “How is your team responding to COVID19 + adjusting plans?” may help. “This question gives investors insights into the challenges the team is facing and how leadership is tackling them,” it states.
  • Psychometric evaluations — The guide also recommends that investors may use this approach to learn more about the founders’ personalities and behavioral aptitude, although it notes that such tests have their flaws (e.g., cultural bias).
  • Diversified and deeper reference sources — The report also recommends that investors can complement direct observations. For example, it notes that Angel Ventures, reaches out to startup team members who are not directly linked with the fundraising process to learn about the work environment and how the team works together.

Recommendations On Product

In addition to typical data analysis, the guide notes that many investors said they tried (or asked local partners to try) the startup’s services (and those of their competitors), since anonymity was much easier to maintain.

Read also:Ukheshe Plans to Expand its Payment Solutions to Asia-Pacific

“With regards to product assessment, the pandemic again offered investors some advantages. Since field operations were suspended, startups had to pivot to pure digital plays, making it easier for investors to experience, observe, and stress-test operations from afar,” it states.

Therefore on product, the guide makes the following recommendations:

  • Go mystery shopping — the report advises investors to pretend to be a target customer and reaching out to the company with queries about the product and how it works. Additionally, it advises them to shop at the startup’s competitors to see if the service and experience is distinctive.
  • Become a customer — the report also exerts investors to download and use the startup’s product or a prototype. It says it helps to stay long enough to experience product updates and marketing campaigns. Look out for bugs, report them as a customer, and evaluate the overall user experience, it says.
  • Conduct virtual site visits — the report further counsels investors to observe startup operations through video calls or recordings, where possible.
  • Listen to customers’ opinions — by identifying the top customers and scheduling calls with them to learn more about their experiences with the startup, it says. It further recommends that investors read app reviews, and talk to businesses from your or your partner networks that could be potential users to hear their views on the startup’s value proposition and growth potential.
  • Take a data-heavy approach — Finally on product, it advises investors to ask about customer acquisition rates and costs. It also exerts them to closely interrogate the data as this can be invaluable. The ideal approach is to get direct access to the startup’s database to analyze basic metrics like acquisition costs, retention rate, lifetime value, average revenue per user, and other metrics related to sustainable growth, it says.
How investors remote due diligence startups

Recommendations On Market

The guide recommends the use of triangulate information with multiple sources to get a more accurate and comprehensive map of the startup’s market. Traditionally, investors triangulate information more with specific stakeholders in their networks, leaning on personal or informal networks, it says.

Read also:Africa’s Business Heroes Renews Calls For Applications From African Entrepreneurs

Particularly, the report notes that in the remote environment, the sources investors are tapping have expanded to include:

  • Accelerators/incubators — that can derisk high-potential startups and provide tailored insights, especially if they have a local presence and sectoral expertise.
  • Data-based benchmarks — that can situate models or sectors in relation to each other.
  • Third-party references and experts — within local networks that could provide direct insights, or connections to other founders that can offer their market experience.

Recommendations On Financials

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the guide notes that financial analysis due diligence has remained largely intact, since very little was dependent on in-person interactions in this space previously.

“However, we did hear that investors expected startups to be leaner and that investment decisions were more focused on unit economics and profitability than before. For instance, they noted that healthy unit economics were weighted more heavily in recent investment decisions,” the guide notes.

Therefore on financials, the guide makes the following recommendations:

  • Apply a deeper focus on select financial metrics — the guide suggests that investors should take a closer look at unit economics and business model intricacies, with a greater focus on CAC, retention rates, and profitability. It also enjoins them to consider performing scenario analyses on all possible revenue models. Also, take a stricter look at a startup’s total runway and burn rate, and focus on the team’s ability to stretch money for a longer period of time, it notes.
  • Look for a lean execution team — the guide recommends that investors examine team salaries and how roles at various levels are compensated. Review team utilization with managers and leadership to assess any redundancies in roles, and also review long-term staffing needs and hiring plans, it states.

For other more detailed recommendations, download the guide here.

How investors remote due diligence startups How investors remote due diligence startups How investors remote due diligence startups

Charles Rapulu Udoh

Charles Rapulu Udoh is a Lagos-based lawyer who has advised startups across Africa on issues such as startup funding (Venture Capital, Debt financing, private equity, angel investing etc), taxation, strategies, etc. He also has special focus on the protection of business or brands’ intellectual property rights ( such as trademark, patent or design) across Africa and other foreign jurisdictions.
He is well versed on issues of ESG (sustainability), media and entertainment law, corporate finance and governance.
He is also an award-winning writer

Airtel Kenya Partners MyDawa to Provide Fast Access To Medicine

Tony Wood, Managing Director, MyDawa

Airtel Kenya has partnered with ePharmacy platform, MyDawa, so that subscribers can have easy and fast access to their medication. According to company sources, Airtel subscribers will be able to log on to the MyDawa app or website without incurring additional data charges. They will also be able to use Airtel Money to pay for medicine, health, wellness, personal care and other essential items.

Tony Wood,  Managing Director, MyDawa
Tony Wood, Managing Director, MyDawa

MyDawa’s Managing Director, Tony Wood describes the partnership as great “that will increase the access to healthcare products in Kenya. We are happy to partner with Airtel, one of the top telecommunications service providers in the country, to ensure that their subscribers are able to access quality medical products in a convenient and affordable way.”

Read also:Uganda Issues First Fintech License, Which Costs Up To $2.8m To MTN, Airtel

“Free access to MyDawa’s services with no data charges helps people to stay at home and ease the financial burden on those who may already have seen family budgets squeezed. This benefit combined with no delivery charges within Nairobi and the option for microfinance amongst the payment options are all focused on increasing access to essential services whilst they stay safe at home.”

Read also:Kenyan Insurtech Startup AiCare Secures Funding From Toyota Tsusho

Prasanta Das Sarma, MD of Airtel Kenya, says “we are happy to be in partnership with MyDawa as it gives our customers more control over their health and wellbeing whilst leveraging on our technology. They can easily order the products they need, make payments via Airtel money and have them delivered by professionals whilst not worrying about the cost of data used in accessing the website or app,”

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry

Ghana’s Real Estate VR Tours Startup DOBIISON Scales Operations

Selasie Awity, founder of DOBIISON

DOBIISON, a Ghanaian based provider of virtual tours and immersive digital experiences for the real estate, construction and tourism industries, is planning on scaling across Africa this year. The startup which was founded in 2018 has built the largest collection of Ghanaian virtual reality (VR) content and is currently at the growth stage where it leverages 360º immersive, interactive content with functionality that helps large businesses like Mantrac and Rendeavour’s Appolonia City transform their online presence and drive conversion rates using VR.

Selasie Awity, founder of DOBIISON
Selasie Awity, founder of DOBIISON

According to  Selasie Awity, founder of the startup, the company is planning on scale across Africa this year, focusing on the real estate and hospitality industries adding that “Our enterprise VR solutions combine multiple media types into one single asset, transforming traditional photos and videos into immersive and interactive content, while additionally capturing interest, intent, and purchases. We help companies transform their online presence and enable a better customer experience while driving conversion rates,” he said.

Read also:Ghanaian Government Says Crypto Transactions Are Illegal

DOBIISON’s freemium VR tourism platform 360 Ghana is the country’s largest library of tourist attractions, experiences and places to stay, in virtual reality. Yet it is beyond tourism that the startup is making its biggest strides.

“Uptake has been great with over 20 businesses and organisations using our enterprise VR services,” Awity said.

“Overall, we see an increase in demand for our solutions as people and businesses respond to the COVID-19 pandemic and the challenges that came with it.”

As businesses in the digital age are mostly born global, “A company in Ghana, for example, can generate leads in Australia, Kenya, America, United Arab Emirates or any other part of the world. Most companies disperse information about their products and services across different channels, which can sometimes lead to low engagement or conversion rates and service gaps,” Awity said.

Read also:Why Mobile Technology is Important to Rural African Communities

“Our virtual reality solution shows prospective customers the complete and full picture in order to catalyse the consideration and purchasing stages of the customer journey. For example, If someone wants to buy a house in Accra, they can go on to the platform, explore the property in 360 degrees, and also purchase directly without leaving the experience. This enables our clients to reach customers in different parts of the world without having to set up offices or hire sales representatives in these countries.”

Valuable tech indeed. Awity previously worked as a creative designer at a marketing agency, where he gained insights into the industries he now serves with DOBIISON.

“I realised a need for another dimension of content beyond pictures and videos that can transform the sales experience for customers and also shorten the consideration stage of the customer journey, and how virtual reality could be the technology to drive this transformation,” he said.

Having started as a one man band, the DOBIISON team has grown over the years, and the company now has a presence in Rwanda as well as Ghana. The self-funded startup is now looking to raise a seed funding round to help it scale its team, operations, VR content library, services and products across West and East Africa.

“We operate mainly in Ghana, however most of our clients are multinational corporations so we do have overlapping services in other countries. Our country executives are also finalising some conversations which will see us digitising more assets and tourist sites in other African countries this year,” Awity said.

Read also:Ethiopia Becomes Africa’s Latest Hot Market For Fintechs As Mukuru And Flutterwave Take Stands

“Our key goals for this year are to grow our digital library of Ghanaian, and African virtual reality content across the tourism, education, and real estate industry and make them accessible to businesses using APIs. Our vision is not just to provide virtual reality solutions across Africa but to distinctly advance the development of virtual reality hardware and software on the continent. To do this we need to scale our operations across Africa and continue to collaborate on cutting edge research and development.”

DOBIISON charges for VR content production and platform development, selling all this as a service that also includes hosting. 

“Revenues have doubled in the last year, as COVID-19 has illustrated the practicality of using our virtual reality solutions for our clients,” said Awity.

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry

Ukheshe Plans to Expand its Payment Solutions to Asia-Pacific

Ukheshe Technologies CEO Clayton Hayward

Ukheshe Technologies, the South African fintech startup has revealed plans to embark on international expansion starting with the Asia-Pacific region as it introduces innovative digital-first payment solutions via key partnerships in what is emerging as a lucrative growth market for the B2B payment technology specialist.

The fintech startup has developed a technology platform that helps banks and telecoms provide SMMEs with affordable digital banking and payment services, with client acquisition, onboarding and distribution costs that are a fraction of traditional merchant accounts. It currently provides the platforms and technology that support nine issuers, 334,029 merchants and over 2.2 million apps, which combined process millions of transactions every month.

Ukheshe Technologies CEO Clayton Hayward
Ukheshe Technologies CEO Clayton Hayward

The decision to expand internationally came after it raised US$2 million in equity and debt funding in November of last year, and it is now making steps in that direction by moving into Asia-Pacific.

Read also:Ethiopia Becomes Africa’s Latest Hot Market For Fintechs As Mukuru And Flutterwave Take Stands

Ukheshe Technologies CEO Clayton Hayward, said while Asia’s traditional banks and telecoms have responded proactively to rapid disruption in the digital payments environment, they are challenged by constraints in building fully integrated SaaS platforms.

“Ukheshe aims to partner with local institutions by offering credible, agile solutions in an ever-changing market. Our payment technologies also solve for the problems of expensive acceptance rails and carrying cash, particularly in markets within Asia-Pacific where digital wallets are expected to become the preferred online payment method over the next four years,” he said.

The expansion will be led by Donovan Drew who has been appointed as president of Asia-Pacific. Drew brings with him over 25 years of experience in enterprise software, telecommunications, networks, outsourcing, services, security and fintech solutions, representing various technologies across several industries. He said he was looking forward to exploring the many opportunities for Ukheshe and its partners in the region.

Read also:Why Mobile Technology is Important to Rural African Communities

“With an increased need for cost-effective digital payment solutions, our value proposition delivers an integrated solution platform for merchants, aggregators, retailers, banks and their customers,” he said.

“We believe we can aid traditional players in re-securing some of their traditional flows by partnering with issuers and acquirers in a dynamic and constantly evolving environment. On the back of tremendous success in Africa, Asia-Pacific offers a similar opportunity to use our talent and experience to deliver world-class payment solutions.”

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry

Kenyan Firm Debarred by the African Development Bank for Corruption

The African Development Bank Group has debarred a Kenyan firm for 36 months over corruption charges. The firms are Mactebac Contractors Limited, a company registered in Kenya and Mr. Joram Opala Otieno, the director and shareholder with effect from 15 December 2020.

Malaba Water and Sanitation Project
Malaba Water and Sanitation Project

An investigation conducted by the Bank’s Office of Integrity and Anti-Corruption established that Mactebac Contractors Limited and Mr. Joram Opala Otieno engaged in fraudulent practices during a tender for the Construction Works for Malaba Water and Sanitation Project under the Kenya Towns Sustainable Water Supply and Sanitation Program in Kenya.

Read also:Ethiopian Fintech Startup ArifPay Gets Backing From Visa

The debarment renders Mactebac Contractors Limited and its affiliates and Mr. Joram Opala Otieno ineligible to participate in Bank Group-financed projects during the debarment period. Additionally, the debarment qualifies for cross-debarment by other multilateral development banks under the Agreement for Mutual Enforcement of Debarment Decisions, including the Asian Development Bank, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the Inter-American Development Bank and the World Bank Group.

At the expiry of the debarment period, Mactebac Contractors Limited will only be eligible to participate in Bank Group-financed projects on condition that it implements an integrity compliance program consistent with the Bank’s guidelines. At the expiry of the debarment period, Mr. Joram Opala Otieno will only be eligible to participate in Bank Group-financed projects on condition that he completes accredited integrity training.

Read also:Classes.ng Launches Open Marketplace for Educational Classes in Nigeria

The Construction Works for Malaba Water and Sanitation Project was a component of the Kenya Towns Sustainable Water Supply and Sanitation Program in Kenya which aimed to improve access, quality, availability and sustainability of water supply in nineteen towns and waste water management services in seventeen towns to improve quality of life and resilience against climate variability and change in Kenya. It was co-financed by the African Development Bank.

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry