Chief Executive
Officers (CEOs) of six of Africa’s largest Mobile Network Operators convened at MWC Kigali to consider the opportunities and challenges for deeper
partnerships with African governments to drive digital inclusion and mobile
infrastructure development across the continent.
In consideration of
these opportunities and challenges, the CEOs engaged with His Excellency President
Paul Kagame, Head of State for the Republic of Rwanda, the MWC host and Chair
of the Smart Africa board, who was supported by the Honourable Ms Paula
Ingabire, the Rwanda Minister of Information and Communications and Innovation.

Present at the meeting
were the CEO of Airtel Africa Group, Segun Ogunsanya, CEO of Axian Group,
Hassanein Hiridjee, CEO of Ethio Telecommunications, and Frehiwot Tamru,
President and Group CEO of MTN Group. Ralph Mupita, CEO of Orange Middle East
and Africa, Jerome Henique and Shameel Joosub, CEO of Vodacom Group.
The CEOs noted the achievements made to date by the mobile
sector against the aspirations and objectives of key global and continental
goals, such as the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Agenda 2063, and
Smart Africa’s Vision of creating a Single Digital Market by 2030.
They believe that a truly connected, dynamic Africa, enabled by
the power of inclusive mobile connectivity, is within our collective grasp –
but to make it a reality, and close the connectivity and usage gaps for good,
deep political support will be required, across both existing and new
partnerships. A key dependency is the need to build the right conditions for
digital infrastructure investment across Africa.

Mobile technologies and services are key enablers for that
vision. And tangible progress has been made. In the first 10 years of Agenda
2063 (2013-2023), mobile operators in Africa invested more than US$70 bn in
building mobile infrastructure, bringing close to 85% of the African population
into mobile broadband connectivity (compared to 95% global average). However,
more than 680 million people, equivalent to three in five people (60%), live in
areas covered by a mobile broadband network in Africa but do not subscribe to
mobile broadband service.
Mobile operators in Sub-Saharan Africa invest US$ 6-8bn per year
in capital expenditure, nearly 20% of their revenues, but significant
additional investments are needed to achieve the ambitious targets of
connecting everyone to the internet and digitally transforming Africa.
The CEOs stated their commitment to collaborate with Africa’s
nation-states’ transformational plans, placing added focus on four priority
areas where governments, working in partnership with the mobile sector, have
the opportunity to drive digital inclusion, economic growth and environmental
transformation.