Africa: Nigeria’s Ready to Lead Africa’s AI Pathways for Prosperity – Shettima

Africa: Nigeria’s Ready to Lead Africa’s AI Pathways for Prosperity – Shettima


* Says nation must shift from consumer of imported technologies to producer of innovation, scalable solutions

Vice-President Kashim Shettima has affirmed Nigeria’s preparedness to lead Africa in deploying Artificial Intelligence (AI) to unlocking new pathways for the continent’s prosperity.

According to him, while AI has become humanity’s most powerful general-purpose technology that would define lives and the future of mankind, the technology will continue to serve as a “profound engine of creativity, capable of augmenting human intelligence and expanding the horizons” of human possibilities.

Shettima, who spoke in Lagos during the official launch of the AI University Innovation Pod (UniPod) University of Lagos, explained why “Nigeria must not be passive in the unfolding AI era”.


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Represented by Deputy Chief of Staff to the President, Senator Ibrahim Hadejia, the vice-president said the nation must build digital foundations that allow its innovators, governments and enterprises to create solutions that reflect its realities and address the country’s unique challenges.

“Whether in agriculture, health, education, or finance, AI has the power to unlock new pathways for prosperity. But it will do so only if we design systems that are inclusive, equitable and rooted in our values. I believe Nigeria is prepared to lead the whole African continent in this endeavour.

“Our investments in digital public infrastructure, our embrace of innovation ecosystems, and our commitment to responsible AI governance all point to a singular goal: to make Nigeria not a consumer of imported technologies, but a producer of knowledge, innovation and scalable solutions,” he stated.

Inaugurating the UniPods, Shettima said the national innovation systems reflect a deliberate shift in how universities are being viewed, noting that the citadels of great learning are not only centres of instruction but also “platforms for production, enterprise, and national development”.

“Projects like this UniPod are an integral part of that delivery architecture where students, researchers and industry practitioners collaborate to build solutions that respond directly to real economic needs,” he added.

The vice-president appreciated development partners, including the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFUND), the University of Lagos and the Lagos State Government for the nation’s first UniPod.