▪ Allow African citizens to verify their legal identity offline and online to access public and private sector services in AU there by contributing to achieve accelerated progress towards continental unity and integration for sustained growth, trade, exchanges of goods, services, free movement of people and capital through establishing a United Africa and fast-tracking economic integration through AfCFTA as stated in aspiration 2 of the Agenda 2063.
▪ Empower African citizens with control over their personal data, including the ability to selectively disclose only those attributes that are required for a particular transaction. The personal information to be disclosed should be minimal, proportionate and should contain only the information relevant to that particular transaction that considered African particular situation and in line with international best practices.
▪ Strengthen trust and interoperability among foundational identification systems of AU.
The implementation of the framework is divided into three phases: phase I (2021 -2022): adoption of the Framework and development of an enabling legislative framework; Phase II (2023 - 2024): development and adoption of technical specifications for the AU interoperable digital ID; Phase III (2025 - 2030): the scale- up of the Framework to provide an infrastructure enabling more advanced use cases as indicated in the high level road map of the Framework.
4. Cybersecurity Landscape in Africa: Assessment of Gaps and Priorities Report.
There is an urgent need for a comprehensive cybersecurity strategy to safeguard Africa's digital expansion which will inform actionable insights to bolster cybersecurity readiness across the continent. Africa's digital revolution has brought unprecedented opportunities but also heightened vulnerability to cyber threats. Acknowledging this, the African Union (AU) Agenda 2063, Digital Transformation Strategy, and the Malabo Convention underscore the importance of cybersecurity. However, despite progress, Africa's readiness for cybercrime remains low, making it a prime target for cybercriminals. Establishing a continent-wide cybersecurity strategy is imperative to secure Africa's digital present and future.
A paradigm shift is needed from viewing cybersecurity as a cost centre to recognizing its role as a driver of business value. This Cybersecurity Landscape in Africa Report maps Africa's cybersecurity landscape, identifies gaps, and proposes key priorities. It underscores the diverse readiness levels among African countries and calls for collective action to enhance overall preparedness. The report assesses risks related to critical infrastructure and provides recommendations for robust cybersecurity strategies, emphasizing capacity building, infrastructure enhancement, and addressing digital vulnerabilities.
The Draft Child Online Safety and Empowerment Policy, is urgent particularly with the expansion into the digital world continues, the need for Africa to consider child safety by design and default becomes ever more urgent. Digital accessibility furnishes children with enormous opportunities and diverse development outcomes, based on its usage. Access to the internet can help children stay connected, improve their digital literacy, enhance educational emancipation and diversify their livelihoods. With increasing digitalization, children are now able to access e- education tools, connect with peers and utilize the enormous potential the internet provides to them. The digital environment can positively contribute to children’s rights, including the rights to be heard, to express themselves, to associate with others, to enjoy their privacy, to seek information, and to play, as set out in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.
5. Digital Transformation Strategy: Sectorial Digital Strategies (Education, Agriculture and Health)
The African Union Digital Agriculture Strategy (DAS) and Implementation Plan establish a framework for the digital transformation of African agriculture and cover the period from 2024 to 2027. The strategy builds on the goals and priority areas of Agenda 2063 and shares the goals for modern agriculture for increased productivity and production (goal 5) for a high standard of living, quality of life, and well-being for all citizens (goal 1). Technology is seen as a driver for the transformation of economies, including agriculture, and economies must be environmentally sustainable and resilient to climate change (goal 7). One of the AU’s flagship projects, the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), signed by 55 AU member states, targets the establishment of regional value chains, and the DAS can help to build the required digital environments. The DAS promotes digital agriculture to achieve “Accelerated Agricultural Growth and Transformation for Shared Prosperity and Improved Livelihoods” in line with the 2014 Malabo Declaration which was recalled at the 2022 AU assembly.
African Union Digital Health Strategy: The strategic direction of travel is to deliver the health services all African citizens require using digital technologies. This includes digital delivery of engaging health content to citizens, interoperable person- based electronic records and management information systems generating quality data and information for operational and strategic decision-making. The strategic direction is not technology-driven but recognizes that it is digital health systems as a whole that need to be nurtured. The DHS sets out eight strategic objectives and associated actions, with particular attention being paid to four major cornerstone initiatives regarding connectivity, capacity, innovation, and coordination.
The African Union Digital Education Strategy and Implementation Plan, which covers the period 2023-2028, establishes a framework for engagement and acceleration of adoption of digital technologies in alignment with the Continental Education Strategy for Africa. The Strategy proposes three core focus areas, seven strategic objectives, and fourteen measures.
The focus areas are: