Author: Christine Muchira/Release

  • Africa food systems summit to be held in Senegal in August

    Africa food systems summit to be held in Senegal in August

    Senegal is set to host over 6,000 food systems leaders from over 90 countries during the 19th edition of the Africa Food Systems Forum (AFSF) in August in Dakar.

    Among leaders expected in Dakar in August include: Heads of State, Ministers, Investors, Youth and Women agripreneurs, Researchers and Donors.

    Themed “Africa’s Youth: Leading Collaboration, Innovation, and Implementation of Africa’s Food Systems Transformation”, this will mark Africa’s most significant agriculture and food-systems moment, hosted by a nation that is budding with youthful innovation.

    Africa’s young people are driving food systems transformation now and this year’s AFS Forum will amplify their leadership, connect them to resources and ensure they’re at the center of Africa’s food future.

    Making the announcement, Senegal’s Minister of Agriculture Food Sovereignty and Livestock, Dr. Mabouba Diagne said the forum reflects the country’s deep commitment to transforming food systems and empowering its young population.

    “With nearly 60pc of Africa’s population under 25, youth are the most potent force shaping the continent’s future. Senegal is therefore honoured to convene Africa’s most influential agriculture leaders and hope that this year’s Forum will shape policy, investment, and innovation. We welcome the world to Dakar and reinforce our belief that Africa can achieve food resilience and sustainable systems.” Dr. Diagne noted.

    Delegates from more than 90 countries are expected to arrive in Dakar, with participation from key international institutions including the Africa Union, UN agencies and major development institutions. Representation will span public and private sectors, academia, NGOs, media, youth, women and farming communities.

    Agriculture employs nearly 69pc of Senegal’s labour force, contributing roughly 17pc of GDP.

    As a Sahel nation, Senegal has invested aggressively in irrigation, storage infrastructure, and resilient farming systems. Hosting this forum reinforces Senegal’s leadership in regional food systems transformation.

    Amath Pathe Sene – Managing Director, Africa Food Systems Forum

    Amath Pathe, Managing Director, Africa Food Systems Forum noted that the 2025 summit will be a pivotal opportunity to engage Africa’s youth as leaders, co-creators, and innovators.

    “This year’s convening is a catalyst for reaching youth and young women in Africa so we can engage them as leaders, co-creators and movement builders. 6,000 voices from across the world will converge in Senegal to exchange ideas and build the future of food systems and we can’t wait for the impact this will have”.

    There is a strong commitment from the government of Senegal to deliver a high impactful event. Comprehensive security protocols, visa facilitation, advanced logistics, multilingual interpretation, and protocol arrangements are in place to ensure smooth execution.

    Registration Now Open

    Online registration for delegates is now open on the official AFS Forum website through this link – https://afs-forum.org/summit/2025/

    AFS Forum

    The Africa Food Systems Forum (AFS Forum) is a global forum on agriculture and food systems, bringing together stakeholders (policy makers, farmers, private sector, youth, women, research) to take practical action and share lessons that will move African food systems transformation forward.

    The AFS Forum’s core objective is to scale up Africa’s food systems and agricultural transformation agenda through the Agenda Setting, Evidence-based Policy Reform, Investment Facilitation and Finance, Knowledge Sharing and Learning, Partnership Development and Coordination.

    Since 2010, the Africa Food Systems Forum has been an annual convening platform and overtime includes investment facilities (deal rooms) and technical assistance through its thematic platforms.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Global campaign launched for World Youth Festival Assembly

    Global campaign launched for World Youth Festival Assembly

    A large-scale international campaign promoting the World Youth Festival (WYF) Assembly kicked off simultaneously in America, Asia, and Africa.

    On July 15, digital billboards appearing in New York, Tokyo, and Lagos all dedicated to the World Youth Festival Assembly were launched simultaneously.

    The international youth event that will be held in Nizhny Novgorod from September 17 to 21, 2025, will bring together 2,000 young people 1,000 from Russia and 1,000 from abroad, including 200 children aged 14 to 17.

    According to a statement, applications for participation can be submitted until July 20 on website.

    The creative concept of the upcoming Assembly “Russia Brings Warmth” is revealed by the idea of “connections”: in the images, young people from different countries touch the sights of Moscow, St. Petersburg, Nizhny Novgorod and Sirius Federal Territory, filling them with color and life.

    The emerging elements blossoming flowers, the sun, birds symbolize the energy of international youth cooperation. All this delivers the main idea of the upcoming event the warmth of human connections and dialogue between cultures.

    Colleagues send photos and videos of billboards from all over the world inviting young people to the WYF Assembly: from Broadway in New York, the central street of Tokyo, Lagos in Nigeria. We are waiting for young people from all over the world in Nizhny Novgorod in September!” commented the head of Rosmolodezh Grigory Gurov in his Telegram channel.

    The event will be held in the format of an interactive modular platform.

    As part of the business program, participants will enjoy immersive shows, battles on current youth topics, workshops, case studies and master classes from leading experts.

    Lagos, Nigeria

    The Assembly will also host castings for labels and project pitches. Young people will be able to test themselves in extreme sports, visit a gastro-picnic, become the authors of the largest painting in the world and much more.

    New York

    Young people under 35 from the media, creative industries, sports, education and science, public administration, entrepreneurship and IT are invited to participate in the Assembly.

    An important criterion for selecting participants is knowledge of English.

    The World Youth Festival

    The World Youth Festival took place on March 1–7, 2024 in Sirius, according to the Decree of Russian President Vladimir Putin on the development of international youth cooperation. The WYF-2024 brought together 20,000 young leaders from 190 countries.

    On the instructions of the President of the Russian Federation, the WYF will be held in Russia on a regular basis once in six years. Also, every six years 10,000 young people from all over the world will get together at the World Youth Festival Forum, and in between, international themed assemblies for 2,000 participants will be held under the auspices of the WYF.

    The first Assembly is scheduled to take place in September 2025 in Nizhny Novgorod. Festival events of various formats will be held in Russia annually.

    According to the instructions of the President of the Russian Federation on the preservation and development of the Festival legacy, the World Youth Festival Directorate continues the work aimed at strengthening international youth cooperation.

     

     

  • Vaccine campaigns cut deaths by nearly 60 pc, study reveals

    Vaccine campaigns cut deaths by nearly 60 pc, study reveals

    Emergency vaccination campaigns have slashed deaths from major infectious disease outbreaks by nearly 60 pc since 2000, according to a new study published this week.

     

    The study, conducted by Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, in collaboration with Australia’s Burnet Institute, and published in the authoritative British Medical Journal (BMJ) Global Health, analyzed 210 outbreaks across 49 low-income countries over a 23-year period.

     

    It found that rapid vaccine deployment during outbreaks of cholera, Ebola, measles, meningitis and yellow fever, had led to estimated reductions in illnesses and deaths of nearly 60 per cent on average.

     

    For diseases like yellow fever and Ebola, the impact was even more dramatic: yellow fever deaths dropped by 99 per cent, while Ebola fatalities fell by 76 per cent.

     

    The results highlight not only the effectiveness of emergency vaccination, but also the critical role of preparedness and speed in response to emerging threats.

     

    “For the first time, we are able to comprehensively quantify the benefit, in human and economic terms, of deploying vaccines against outbreaks of some of the deadliest infectious diseases,” said Sania Nishtar, CEO of Gavi.

     

    “This study demonstrates clearly the power of vaccines as a cost-effective countermeasure to the increasing risk the world faces from outbreaks.”

     

    Gavi: A lifesaving partnership

     

    Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, is a unique global partnership that helps vaccinate nearly half the world’s children against deadly and debilitating diseases.

     

    It brings together developing country and donor governments, the World Health Organization (WHO), UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the World Bank, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and other key partners to expand access to immunisation.

     

    Gavi also maintains global vaccine stockpiles for major diseases, managed in coordination with WHO, UNICEF, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), and the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC).

     

    Quantifying lives and costs saved

     

    In addition to reducing deaths and disability-adjusted life years, emergency vaccination during the 210 outbreaks studied generated nearly $32 billion in economic benefits from averting premature deaths and years of life lost to disability.

     

    The study’s authors say this figure is likely a conservative estimate, as it does not include the broader social and macroeconomic impacts of major outbreaks.

     

    For example, the 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa, which occurred before an approved vaccine was available, cost the region an estimated $53 billion.

     

    In contrast, later outbreaks responded to with emergency vaccines saw deaths reduced by three-quarters and the threat of regional spread dramatically lowered.

     

    Source: Gavi/Burnet Institute study Results by disease

    Disease-by-disease gains

     

    The study provides a breakdown of vaccine effectiveness by disease.

     

    Measles, one of the most infectious viruses known, saw cases drop by 59 per cent and deaths by 52 per cent thanks to outbreak response campaigns.

     

    Yellow fever saw the biggest gains, with emergency vaccination nearly eliminating deaths – a 99 per cent drop.

     

    Cholera and meningitis, which often strike communities with limited healthcare access and infrastructure, saw more modest but still meaningful reductions in cases and deaths.

     

    Vaccinations helped reduce cholera cases and deaths by 28 per cent and 36 per cent, respectively, across 40 cholera outbreaks between 2011 and 2023. For meningitis, cases and deaths fell by 27 per cent and 28 per cent respectively, over 10 years.

     

    Vaccines, COVID-19, and future threats

     

    The coronavirus“>COVID-19 pandemic was a stark reminder of the value of vaccines, which saved an estimated 20 million lives globally in the first year of rollout aloneaccording to the respected and influential Lancet medical journal.

     

    Yet the pandemic also disrupted routine immunisation, leading to dangerous backsliding in coverage rates for diseases like measles and polio. The Gavi study emphasizes that emergency vaccination must be paired with strong routine immunisation systems to prevent future outbreaks.

     

    Looking ahead, Gavi’s 2026-2030 strategy includes expanding stockpiles, accelerating vaccine access for diseases like mpox and hepatitis E, and supporting preventive campaigns in high-risk regions.

  • DPP approves terrorism charges against 37 individuals in Kahawa Law Courts

    DPP approves terrorism charges against 37 individuals in Kahawa Law Courts

    The Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) has approved and filed terrorism charges against 37 individuals arraigned at the Kahawa Law Courts.

    The charges follow the arrest of suspects in Kikuyu and Matuu area of Kiambu and Machakos Counties, respectively.

    According to a statement by the DPP, among those arraigned are 25 individuals alleged to have committed a terrorist act on 25th June 2025, between 12:00 PM and 11:00 PM in the Kikuyu.

    “The act resulted in damage to government facilities, including Kikuyu Probation Offices, Kikuyu Law Courts, Kikuyu Sub-County Offices, Kikuyu Chief’s Office, the Office of the Registrar of Persons, Kikuyu Sub-County Education Office, the Sub-County Accountant’s Office, Registrar of Lands Office, Dagoretti Police Post and the Kikuyu Deputy County Commissioner’s Office.” The statement read.

    The DPP noted that the suspects also face a separate charge of arson, with an alternative charge of malicious damage to property.

    They were arraigned alongside two other individuals, Peter Kinyanjui Wanjiru, alias Kawanjiru, and Serah Wanjiku Thiga, who face similar charges.

    The DPP further approved terrorism charges against 10 other individuals arrested in Matuu, Machakos County.

    They are alleged to have committed a terrorist act on 25th June 2025 at Matuu Police Station, leading to the destruction of government property, including police vehicles, and the assault of officers on duty.

    The prosecution confirmed to the court that the charges were instituted after perusal of the investigation files and independently made the decision to charge all 37 suspects with committing terrorist acts under Section of the Prevention of Terrorism Act.

    The prosecution urged the court to find that the suspects were lawfully presented before the court and duly served with the charge sheets.

    The prosecution further argued that the charges are properly before the court, the charge sheets are not defective, and the accused should proceed to take plea.

    In response to claims that two individuals were allegedly kidnapped after being granted bail at Ruiru Law Courts, the DPP clarified that the individuals in question had not been charged at the time.

    A miscellaneous application had been filed seeking custodial orders for Peter and Serah, and following a review of the file, the decision was made to charge them.

    The prosecution reiterated that there is no malice in prosecuting the suspects and that the charges are not targeted at demonstrators but at individuals who allegedly chose to engage in acts of terrorism and destruction.

    This followed an application by the suspects through their counsel seeking the court to bar the DPP from charging them with terrorist charges.

    Gideon Kiaga has directed that the suspects remain in custody until 10th July 2025, when the court will deliver a ruling on the application by the suspects seeking to bar the DPP from charging them with terrorist charges.

  • UN summit confronts AI’s dawn of wonders and warnings

    UN summit confronts AI’s dawn of wonders and warnings

    The UN’s flagship platform on artificial intelligence opened in Geneva on Tuesday, launching four days of high-level dialogue, cutting-edge demonstrations and urgent calls for inclusive AI governance.

    The event comes as autonomous and generative systems evolve faster than regulatory frameworks can keep pace.

    The AI for Good Global Summit 2025 brings together governments, tech leaders, academics, civil society and young people to explore how artificial intelligence can be directed toward Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and away from growing risks of inequality, disinformation and environmental strain.

    “We are the AI generation,” said Doreen Bogdan-Martin, chief of the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) UN’s specialized agency for information and communications technology in a keynote address.

    But being part of this generation means more than just using these technologies.

    “It means contributing to this whole-of-society upskilling effort, from early schooling to lifelong learning,” she added.

    Warnings on AI risks

    Bogdan-Martin warned of mounting dangers in deploying AI without sufficient public understanding or policy oversight.

    “The biggest risk we face is not AI eliminating the human race. It is the race to embed AI everywhere, without sufficient understanding of what that means for people and our planet,” she said.

    Her remarks reflected a growing sense of urgency among policymakers and technologists, as new “agentic AI” systems capable of autonomous reasoning and action emerge at unprecedented speed.

    With some experts predicting human-level AI within the next three years, concerns about safety, bias, energy consumption and regulatory capacity have intensified.

    © ITU Tech on display at the AI for Good Global Summit.

    Tech on display

    The summit’s agenda reflects these tensions.

    Over 20,000 square meters of exhibit space at Geneva’s Palexpo now hosts more than 200 demonstrations, including a flying car, a fish-inspired water quality monitor, brain-computer interfaces and AI-driven disaster response tools.

    Workshops throughout the week will tackle topics ranging from AI in healthcare and education to ethics, gender inclusion and global governance.

    One highlight will be theAI Governance Day on Thursday, where national regulators and international organizations will address the gap in global oversight. An ITU survey found that 85 per cent of countries lack an AI-specific policy or strategy, raising alarms about uneven development and growing digital divides.

    Focus on health

    Health is a prominent theme this year.

    On Wednesday, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) will lead a session titled “Enabling AI for Health Innovation and Access,” bringing together technologists, regulators, clinicians and humanitarian leaders to address how AI can improve healthcare delivery especially in low-resource settings.

    Real-world applications from AI-powered triage in emergency care to diagnostic tools for rural clinics will be spotlighted, alongside a preview of WHO’s forthcoming Technical Brief on AI in Traditional Medicine, set for official launch on the main stage.

    Experts will also examine the challenges of interoperability, regulatory harmonisation and intellectual property rights at the intersection of AI and global health.

    The summit will also feature the AI for Good Awards, recognising groundbreaking projects that harness AI for public benefit, with categories spanning people, planet and prosperity.

    © ITU Tech on display at the AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva

    Launchpad for action

    The health track exemplifies the summit’s core goal: ensuring AI serves the public good, especially in areas of greatest need.

    Youth-led robotics teams from underserved communities will present solutions for disaster recovery and waste management, while startups compete in the Innovation Factory to showcase AI tools for education and climate resilience.

    Live demonstrations include an autonomous orchard robot, a self-sanitising mobile toilet, and a drone-eDNA system for scalable biodiversity and pest monitoring.

    Closing her keynote, Bogdan-Martin reminded participants that the future of AI is a shared responsibility.

    “Let’s never stop putting AI at the service of all people and our planet,” she said.

  • Funding shortages threaten relief for millions of Sudanese refugees: WFP

    Funding shortages threaten relief for millions of Sudanese refugees: WFP

    Critical shortfalls in global humanitarian funding now threaten millions of Sudanese refugees fleeing war to seek refuge in neighbouring countries, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) said on Monday.

    In an alert, the UN agency warned that it faces having to make “drastic cuts” to life-saving food assistance, which may “grind to a halt” in the Central African Republic, Egypt, Ethiopia and Libya in the coming months as resources run out.

    WFP noted that the situation for many Sudanese refugees is already dire, more than two years since war erupted between Sudan’s national army and paramilitary rebels.

    “In Uganda, many vulnerable refugees are surviving on less than 500 calories a day” – less than a quarter of daily nutritional needs – as new arrivals strain refugee support systems, WFP said.

    In Chad, which hosts almost a quarter of the four million refugees who fled Sudan, food rations will be reduced in the coming months without new contributions.

    Vulnerable youngsters

    Children are particularly vulnerable to sustained periods of hunger and malnutrition rates among young refugees in reception centres in Uganda and South Sudan have already breached emergency thresholds.

    According to WFP, refugees are already severely malnourished even before arriving in neighbouring countries to receive emergency assistance.

    “This is a full-blown regional crisis that’s playing out in countries that already have extreme levels of food insecurity and high levels of conflict,” said Shaun Hughes, WFP Emergency Coordinator for the Sudan Regional Crisis.

    “Millions of people who have fled Sudan depend wholly on support from WFP, but without additional funding we will be forced to make further cuts to food assistance. This will leave vulnerable families, and particularly children, at increasingly severe risk of hunger and malnutrition.”

     

  • 100-day countdown to “Intervision’25” begins in Moscow

    100-day countdown to “Intervision’25” begins in Moscow

    The countdown to “Intervision’25″ officially began with a grand launch ceremony at Moscow’s Manezhnaya Square, unveiling the contest’s countdown clock and marking the final stretch of preparations for one of the year’s most anticipated cultural events.

    The contest that is set to take place on September 20, 2025, at Live Arena in Moscow, the international music contest will bring together 20 countries.

    Members of the contest’s Supervisory Board and Organizing Committee initiated the countdown, symbolizing the imminent arrival of a spectacular show reviving the legendary traditions of “Intervision”. The ceremony “100 Days Until Intervision’25” was broadcast live.

    “Our values strong families, volunteerism, mutual aid, and respect are what truly attract people from around the world to our country. These are the ideals the world lacks today. Russia has repeatedly been a center of musical culture throughout history in the 19th century, when composers like Beethoven and Verdi wrote pieces specifically for premieres in St. Petersburg, and again in the 20th century. Now, in the 21st century, it must be so once more. And it will be. I am confident that on September 20, Russia will become the world’s music capital. Thank you, and best of luck”, remarked Sergei Novikov, Chief of the Presidential Directorate for Social Projects.

    The countdown clock, installed on Manezhnaya Square, features a diamond-shaped illuminated logo of the contest atop a stepped podium.

    “Music and culture must remain beyond politics a principle we steadfastly uphold. Despite recent challenges, global interest and respect for Russian art endure. Culture cannot be canceled it speaks a universal language, uniting people regardless of political circumstances”, stated Mikhail Shvydkoy, Special Presidential Envoy on International Cultural Cooperation.

    The ceremony coincided with Russia Day, and opened with the national anthem performed by singer Valeriya alongside a choir of Moscow’s large families. The visual symbol of the upcoming music celebration will remain active until September 20.

    “I am truly delighted that our country is hosting a music contest of this caliber. This is more than just music it’s a universal language connecting nations, especially in these challenging times. I am certain ‘Intervision’ will become a magnet for the fi nest voices and the warmestemotions”, said Valeriya.

    Additionally, a large-scale volunteer corps is being assembled to support the contest, with active recruitment and training currently underway.

    This year, 20 countries will participate: Azerbaijan, Belarus, Venezuela, Vietnam, Egypt, India, Kazakhstan, Qatar, China, Colombia, Cuba, Kyrgyzstan, the UAE, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Serbia, the USA, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and South Africa.

    “Intervision’25” is an International Music Contest designed to foster open multicultural  dialogue.

    Through artistry and creativity, participants will showcase their nations’ spiritual and moral heritage, while viewers will immerse themselves in the unique traditions, customs, and creative heritage of each country.

     

     

  • Duale pledges full health sector digitization to end fragmentation, align donor support

    Duale pledges full health sector digitization to end fragmentation, align donor support

    Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale has assured Development Partners in Health, Kenya (DPHK), of the government’s resolve to eliminate fragmentation in the health sector through full digitization.

    Speaking at a high-level consultative meeting in Nairobi, the CS emphasized that all health systems, existing and new must be certified and coordinated through the Digital Health Agency, as outlined in the Digital Health Act and its regulations.

    He noted that digitization will enhance service delivery, enable telemedicine, track and trace health products to end users, and ensure only qualified professionals provide care. “We are building an integrated digital framework to align donor support with national goals and ensure long-term sustainability,” he said.

    The CS also briefed DPHK on Kenya’s Universal Health Coverage (UHC) progress, built on six key pillars: publicly financed primary health care, a rights-based social health insurance model, transparent digital health systems, strengthened emergency and referral services, sustainable health commodity security, and a motivated, well-distributed workforce.

    He underscored the need for coordinated efforts, aligned investments, and joint accountability, which he termed essential for effective health delivery.

    The CS committed to institutionalizing the existing partnership framework based on the principles of “one national plan, one budget, and one monitoring and evaluation framework.” DPHK Chair Dr. Serawit Bruck-Landais reaffirmed support for Kenya’s UHC priorities under the Bottom-Up Economic Transformation Agenda (BETA).

    Duale thanked DPHK for their role in policy dialogue, financing, technical expertise, and capacity building, and called for structured alignment to replace fragmented goodwill.

    The meeting also reflected on key areas including KEMSA reforms, expenditure tracking, resource mapping and mobilization, and outbreak response strengthening.

    He was accompanied by Principal Secretaries Dr. Ouma Oluga (Medical Services) and Mary Muthoni (Public Health and Professional Standards), Director General for Health Dr. Patrick Amoth, WHO Representative Dr. Abdourahmane Diallo, and other senior Ministry officials.

  • Kenyan teams excel in Huawei ICT Competition Global Finals

    Kenyan teams excel in Huawei ICT Competition Global Finals

    Kenya’s growing reputation as a digital powerhouse was once again affirmed as student teams from Kenyan universities posted impressive results at the Huawei ICT Competition Global Finals held in Shenzhen, China.

    A combined team of ICT students from Kenya’s Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology and Machakos University secured First Prize in the Computing track at the Global Final.

    In the Network track, a joint team from Machakos University, JKUAT, and the University of Nairobi secured Second Prize, while another Kenyan team comprising students from JKUAT and Moi University—earned Second Prize in the Cloud track.

    Meanwhile, the Egerton University team, dubbed “Silicon Savannah,” claimed Third Prize in the Innovation track for their Smart Air Quality Monitoring System, highlighting Kenya’s growing strength in applying ICT to solve real-world challenges.

    Speaking during the award ceremony held on Saturday, 24th May 2025 in Shenzhen, China, Youth Affairs and Creative Economy, Ministry of Youth Affairs, Creative Economy and Sports Principal Secretary Fikirini Jackobs expressed gratitude to Huawei for granting the students the opportunity to participate in the competition.

    “Thank you Huawei for the opportunity and Congratulations TEAM Kenya (Lecturers and students) for the resounding victory and more grace as we explore and nurture the expertise for the betterment of our beloved country. More grace to you, Comrades and friends,” remarked PS Fikirini.

    Kenyan Ambassador to China Willy Bett, Khadija Mohammed, Lutta Yeng from HUAWEI Kenya, Albert Ombiro Kenyan Education Attachè to China, Philip Oyier and Miss Wairimu Gichaiya (JKUAT), Miss Patricia Gitonga (UoN) and Franklin Mutisya (Machakos University) were part of the Kenyan delegation behind the 12-member Kenyan team that participated in the Huawei ICT Competition Global Finals that began on Tuesday, 20th May.

    Universities and students from across the Southern Africa region showcased the talents at the Global Final, underscoring the rapid development of digital skills in the Southern Africa region.

    Teams from countries including Cameroon, Ghana, Madagascar, Nigeria, Tanzania and Uganda demonstrated their advanced skills by winning multiple awards across competition tracks such as Network, Cloud, Computing, and Innovation.

    In his opening address during the finals, Ritchie Peng, Director of the ICT Strategy & Business Development Dept at Huawei, said, “To achieve the goal of learning through competition and inspiring innovation through competition, we have continuously evolved the design of competition topics. The Practice Competition aligns with our vision for an Intelligent World 2030 and encourages students to master cloud computing, big data, and AI to drive social progress. The Innovation Competition focuses on green development and digital inclusion, motivating participants to solve real-world challenges in sectors like agriculture, healthcare, and education through ICT.”

    The 2024–2025 edition marks the 10th anniversary of the Huawei ICT Competition. Since 2015, the contest has provided a global platform for over 960,000 students from 2,000 institutions in more than 100 countries.

    The latest edition saw 210,000 participants from over 80 countries, with 179 elite teams making it to the Global Final.

    The 2024-2025 competition is the biggest so far, attracting more than 210,000 students from colleges and universities across more than 80 countries and regions. Following national and regional competitions, 179 teams from 48 countries and regions made it to the Global Final.

    The competition is recognised as a key partner flagship program by UNESCO’s Global Skills Academy.

     

    Also read https://www.kbc.co.ke/kenyan-students-in-china-for-global-finals-of-huawei-ict-competition/

     

  • Kenya Power commits Ksh 7M to upgrade learning facilities in four counties

    Kenya Power commits Ksh 7M to upgrade learning facilities in four counties

    Five public schools in four counties are set to benefit from Kenya Power Foundation’s Kshs.7 million education-focused social investment, targeting structural renovations and facelift projects for improved learning environment.

    The Foundation will channel Kshs.4.5 million to support one school each in Baringo, Turkana, and Machakos Counties, while two schools in Nairobi County will collectively receive Kshs.2.5 million during the 2024/25 financial year.

    The funds will help in renovating dilapidated classrooms and completing facelift projects, a move that is aimed at improving learning conditions in the respective schools.

    Speaking during a Kshs.1.5 million cheque handover ceremony at Nairobi School, Logan Christi Hambrick, Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Kenya Power Foundation and a Member of the Kenya Power Board of Directors, reaffirmed the Foundation’s long-term commitment to supporting education initiatives across the country.

    “Kenya Power Foundation is pleased to continue this journey that began late last financial year in this school. Today’s cheque handover will help complete a key refurbishment project and we’re equally excited about ongoing education initiatives in Baringo, Turkana, and Machakos counties,” said Hambrick.

    “We have plans to scale this up in all the counties and we are inviting all the like-minded individuals and institutions to join us in undertaking this cause,” she added. The Foundation aims to leverage strategic partnerships through collaborations, MOUs, and sponsorships to increase its impact.

    Apart from rehabilitating learning facilities and construction of learning infrastructure, Kenya Power Foundation intends to provide endowment funds and scholarships for students in marginalized communities.

    The Kenya Power Foundation was launched in September 2024, marking a significant milestone towards Kenya Power’s commitment to undertaking sustainable social responsibility initiatives in all the 47 counties through empowering communities and lighting lives.

    Kenya Power Foundation focuses on three key pillars, which include education and skills development, energy and environment, and social investment and community wellness.