At UN STI Forum, USCIB and IOE Deliver Side-Event on Innovation Solutions in Africa 

Top left to right: Norine Kennedy (USCIB), Edward Obiko (Microsave), Megan O’Neill (Microsoft) Bottom left to right: Dr. Cosma Zavazava (ITU), Inhee Chung (Samsung), Jehiel Oliver (CEO, Hello Tractor)

On the occasion of the UN Science, Technology and Innovation in Africa Day, USCIB co-organized with the International Organization of Employers (IOE) an official virtual side event, Catalytic Private Sector Innovation Solutions in Africa. The side event focused on technology and innovation partnerships as catalysts to advance the sustainable and resilient graduation of Least Developed Countries (LDCs), most of which are located in Africa. The event preceded the eighth UN Science, Technology and Innovation Forum (STIF) in New York, a key meeting preparing for the UN SDG Summit in September. 

“Driving meaningful change in Africa will depend on sustained engagement by local business communities working with global business partners across all sectors,” said USCIB Senior Vice President for Policy and Global Strategy Norine Kennedy. “This catalytic dynamic is key to deploying the science-based solutions that underpin SDGs and Our Common Agenda (OCA) implementation.” 

The event focused on ensuring that business is part of the conversation relating to the science-policy interface, to listen, to learn and engage with stakeholders towards collective bottom-up actions that are needed for the implementation and integration of solutions that have real impact on the ground. 

Dr. Cosmas Zavazava, director of the Telecommunication Development Bureau at the International Telecommunications Union (ITU), gave keynote remarks. Zavazava called for a new era of partnerships. ITU is partnering with businesses on the ground in Africa and globally through programs such as the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Alliance for Digital Development, Partner2Connect Digital Coalition, and Giga Global—a joint global initiative by ITU and UNICEF that aims to connect every school to the Internet and every young person to information, opportunity and choice.  

“Public private partnerships are essential to drive digital innovation, build human capacity and deliver much-needed infrastructure to connect the unconnected,” said Zavazava.  

Participants also heard from a panel of experts, which included Shea Gopaul, IOE special representative to the UN, Hasna Barkat Daoud (Employers Federation of Djibouti), Megan O’Neill from USCIB member Microsoft, Jehiel Oliver, CEO at Hello Tractor, Edward Obiko (Microsave) and Inhee Chung (Samsung).  

Over 40 participants tuned into the meeting from across the globe, ranging from countries such as Belgium, Djibouti, Egypt, Ghana, India, Kenya, Nigeria, South Korea, Turkey and the United States.  

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