Good morning. 
My first question is: why do we need robots that can outrun humans?
Letโs rewind a bit. Last year in China, humans raced robots and won by almost three hours. In the same race on Sunday, the winning robot beat humans by over 10 minutes. If you look closely, this is an extended metaphor for how fast technology is closing gaps that once felt impossible.
Now imagine what this could unlock in our part of the worldโreaching flooded areas faster, moving supplies across rough terrain, responding to emergencies, and okay, maybe finally getting your package delivered on time.
Iโm low-key curious: what would you use a super-fast robot for?
โOpeyemi
Image Source: Terra Industries
A good old jollof rice banter might divide two countries only separated by a one-hour flight, but a Nigerian drone manufacturer is willing to share its toys.
Terra Industries, the Nigerian defence-tech startup that has raised $34 million this year, is heading to Ghana with a 34,000-square-foot drone factory in Accra, with plans to launch in June.
Terra is scaling: The company has had a remarkable year so far, and this is only the latest icing. Announced on Monday, the Accra plant, named Pax-2, will expand its current 15,000 km factory in Abuja, Nigeria, as it scales its drone production capacity.
Terra, which currently produces unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), ground vehicles, and sensory towers, plans to produce 50,000 drones by 2028. At that scale, it could become the largest hardware manufacturer in the defence-tech sector.
State of play: Terra has slowly embedded itself into Nigeriaโs military operations. In February, it signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the defence corporation run by the Nigerian Armed Forces to create a unit that assembles arms and trains local talent.
While the same partnership scale with Ghana might not be on the cards yet, the companyโs posture is leaning toward training and expanding talent. Its new facility will employ about 120 engineers and deepen Ghanaโs defence-tech talent layer.
Operating both the Nigerian and Ghanaian markets, Terra could end up sitting at the centre of West Africaโs emerging defence manufacturing capacity, moving talent, skills, and production know-how across borders while both governments lean on it to reduce reliance on imported systems.
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Immaculate Kassait, Data Commissioner of the Office of the Data Protection Commissioner (ODPC) in Kenya. Image Source: CIO Africa.
After watching data breaches unfold across various sectors in Africaโand facing a few (okay, maybe billions) threats itselfโKenya is trying to prevent the situation from going from bad to ugly.
The country wants to tighten customer data storage guidelines for operators in its transport sector, including public buses (matatus), railway companies, airlines, and ride-hailing apps like Uber and Bolt.
New rules: The Office of the Data Protection Commissioner (ODPC), the countryโs data protection watchdog, is now requiring all transport companies that collect and process customer data to store those assets locally or ensure they keep a copy that can be accessed within the country.
What companies are being asked to do: They now have to fully account for how data moves through their systems from the moment it is collected to when it is stored, used, shared, or deleted. They must clearly define why they are collecting personal data and ensure it is only used for that purpose.
The regulator is also mandating affected companies to formally register their status as either data controllers or processors, in an attempt to hold operators responsible when they suffer breaches.
Companies must also appoint a data protection officer to oversee compliance and track cross-border data transfers to ensure appropriate safeguards are in place. Failure to comply with these new rules could result in a fine of up to KES 5 million ($38,700) or 1% of annual turnover, or two years in jail.
Why this matters: Transport companies process passenger identities. Every trip generates data about where you went, when, how often, and how you paid. Over time, that builds a detailed picture of peopleโs movements and behaviour. In the hands of the wrong hacker, that is a powerful surveillance tool that encroaches on peopleโs lives, risking their safety.
Kenya is getting ahead of that risk by forcing structure and accountability into how this data is handled.
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Hisham Talaat Moustafa, CEO of TMG. Image Source: Egypt Today
We may be nothing close to a fully automated, futuristic city in real life (IRL), but the enthusiasm of African regulators and companies to build โsmart citiesโ is a joy to observe. We might be closer to a real-life Wakanda, but here we are, being indifferent.
After Kenya (Konza), Nigeria (Eko Atlantic), and Rwanda (Kigali Innovation City), Egypt is the latest to announce plans for a smart city project.
Talaat Moustafa Group (TMG), an Egyptian multinational real estate development company that works closely with the government, plans to build โThe Spine,โ a new smart city east of Cairo valued at EGP 1.4 trillion ($27 billion).
State of play: The project will span 2.4 square kilometres and include more than 160 towers, alongside homes, offices, hotels, and retail spaces. Over 70% of the land is set aside for green areas, a deliberate attempt to design order into a region where rapid urban growth has often outpaced planning.
The development is backed by the National Bank of Egypt (NBE), the countryโs largest commercial bank by assets, and is expected to receive special investment zone status, offering tax and regulatory incentives to attract capital.
Between the lines: Egypt is building investment magnets. TMG estimates the project could generate EGP 818 billion ($15.7 billion) in tax revenue and create over 55,000 direct jobs, with another 100,000 indirectly.
It is part of a broader state-backed push to rethink how cities are built and financed in the Middle East. From the UAE-backed Ras El Hekma project to Qatarโs planned tourism hub in Alam Al-Roum, Egypt is leaning heavily on large-scale developments to attract foreign capital, ease pressure on Cairo, and create new economic centres.
Zoom out: The country is aiming to build modern cities that can compete globally, and capital will follow. The harder question is who gets to live in them, and whether these developments evolve into functioning urban centres or simply remain nice-to-have high-end enclaves.
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Image Source: Tenor
With the raft of policies coming from different countries in quick succession, it seems regulators are tired of markets running on autopilot. South Africa is the latest to step in.
The country is coming for unused spectrum, and this time, it is not asking nicely. A new telecoms bill is proposing to force operators to use their spectrum and network resources, or share their toys with others.
The Electronic Communications Amendment Bill, 2026, is South Africaโs latest attempt to shake up a sector long criticised for high costs and limited competition. The โuse it or share itโ rule will allow regulators to force operators to hand over idle spectrum if it has been sitting unused for two years. Smaller players, including community networks, are first in line to benefit.
Between the lines: This is about fairness, but thereโs more than meets the eye. Spectrum is the backbone of mobile connectivity, and in South Africa, a handful of large operators control most of it. By forcing sharing, regulators are trying to lower barriers for new entrants and chip away at the dominance of Vodacom, MTN, and Telkom.
What is really happening? The government is redesigning how telecoms infrastructure works. Big operators will now be required to support mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs), lease critical infrastructure like towers and cables, and comply with standardised municipal rules to speed up network rollout. The era of building and guarding your own turf is being replaced by one of shared access.
Zoom out: If it passes, the bill could significantly change competition and, ideally, pricing. But forcing cooperation in a fiercely competitive industry is easier said than enforced. South Africa is pushing for a model where shared infrastructure delivers cheaper, wider connectivity, without slowing down the very players it depends on to build it.
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Source:
|
Coin Name |
Current Value |
Day |
Month |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin | $74,215 |
โ 1.92% |
+ 4.86% |
| Ether | $2,268 |
โ 2.92% |
+ 5.67% |
| Aave Ethereum WETH | $2,244 |
โ 2.98% |
+ 2.94% |
| Solana | $83.91 |
โ 2.01% |
โ 7.01% |
* Data as of 06.50 AM WAT, April 21, 2026.
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Written by: Emmanuel Nwosu and Opeyemi Kareem
Edited by: Emmanuel Nwosu and Ganiu Oloruntade
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