10/05/2026

French Tech Nairobi

 

Kenya's technology sector is booming, driven by digital innovation and artificial intelligence.

To tap into that growth, the French Embassy has launched French Tech Nairobi - a dedicated hub supporting local start-ups and new businesses, with ambitions to extend that backing across the wider continent:





The 'Africa Forward' summit opens on Monday 11 May 2026 in Nairobi

 




The summit has been named 'Africa Forward – Partnerships between Africa and France for Innovation and Growth Summit'. It invites the French and African business communities, for the very first time, in an event co-organised with an Anglophone country.

More soon!


09/05/2026

Africa Forward Fest @ Alliance Française Nairobi

 


Africa Forward Fest is the cultural festival organised at l'Alliance Française de Nairobi - the French cultural centre in the Kenya capital, ahead of the political and business forum 'Africa Forward'.




The festival showcases writers from all over Africa, creating stories in different languages.

Tracy Ochieng is a moderator at the Africa Forward Fest and hosted a session on Gen Z in Kenya, and another one with Eritrean author Donica Merhazion.




Donica Merhazion left Eritrea as a refugee for Kenya, lived later in the US, then came back to Kenya 15 years ago with her family. 'Born at the End of the World' is her first book.




Born in the midst of Ethiopia's Red Terror, her book channels her family's experiences. 

A former journalist and educator with degrees in journalism and education, she is passionate about storytelling, and inspires her own students to love learning and embrace their potential while finding time to write in her personal time.




Other authors shares their stories over multiple panels.






More soon on RFI English



French Tech Nairobi

 

Still reporting from Nairobi...

Yesterday's story:

Technology — and in particular digital innovation and artificial intelligence — is booming in Kenya. 

To tap into that growth, the French Embassy has set up a dedicated hub called French Tech Nairobi, backing new businesses and start-ups locally, with an eye on expanding that support across the rest of Africa. 

Brandon Opondo and Michael Mbae are two of the members. They studied in Paris at Sciences Po and now work back home in Nairobi.

More on our RFI English channels on Monday! 







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08/05/2026

Electric Nairobi

 

Hello from Kenya!

I'm working on a first story on electric vehicles production in Nairobi, how it helps bringing cleaner transport in the city but also elsewhere in the country and beyond, in Africa.

I visited the headquarter of eWaka, met with its two co-founder, Celeste and Jimmy...





...as well as the large factory of Roam Electric, near Nairobi National Park.

Friendly, busy people, hard at work to change transport one vehicle at a time! 





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More soon in my podcast, articles, videos for RFI English


05/05/2026

02/05/2026

Newsletter - May 2026

 


Going back to Nairobi

This complicated year, with all its horrors, is also the one bringing me back to Kenya, a country that thought more than any other, as a journalist, and as a ongoing student of world affairs.





Dear friends and readers,

Hope you’ve been well…

After Senegal, South Africa, Morocco, Côte d’Ivoire, my job is now sending me to Kenya, a place where I was a freelance correspondent over a decade ago, covering aso Uganda, Ethiopia and Somalia.

I learned a lot about how bias our western news cycles are, how enormous and diverse Africa is, how badly represented as well, and these lessons can impact anything we read and enlighten all our leaders decisions…

Yet, a lot has changed between 2012 and 2026.

As Macron’s France promises to be a new form of better partner for the continent, can it convince? Is it even needed?

Let’s dive… then look at other parts of the continent, and of the world.


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Going back to Nairobi

 

28/04/2026

From reggae to grime: how black music became synonymous with a British sound

 




As an exhibition retraces how music from Africa, the Caribbean and North America merged to make a distinctly British sound, at the new V&A East museum in Stratford, London, in our podcast Spotlight on Africa, I look at over a century of black music in the diaspora, in Britain and beyond.



Spotlight on Africa

From reggae to grime: how black music became synonymous with a British sound


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In this episode this week, we’re in London to talk about the history of African and Afro-Caribbean music in Britain. Centuries of Black music-making in the country is highlighted at the latest iteration of the world renowned Victoria & Albert Museum, the V&A East, which opened on 18 April in London's neighbourhood of Stratford.

The museum’s first exhibition, titled 'The Music is Black: A British Story', and offers a survey of Black music linked the UK, starting with early drumbeats brought back from Africa and going up to the latest innovations in popular music on the island.  

Black British music takes centre stage as London's V&A East opens doors

Over 500 years of cultural history

From Africa to England, via the Caribbean and North America, black music also shows how the contribution of the people of African descent still resonates in the United Kingdom, from reggae to rap and grime, an East-London-born contemporary Black British musical genre that has enabled young people to create a sense of belonging, while connecting to a global audience.

In this episode you hear the director of the museum, Gus Casely-Hayford, about how he imagined a space that would attract visitors from all over the world, including from some of the most popular and multicultural parts of London.

Multitude of music genres

Lovers rock, two-tone, rocksteady, dub, trip hop, garage, drill, dub, ska, drum & bass, jungle, grime... all these music genres emerged in the UK influence by African and Caribbean music after it had travelled to the West Indies and the British Empire in general, then came to the island, especially after WWI and WWII.

But the story began way before then, so, the genres presented in the exhibitions also include classical music,  jazz, soul, funk and rock’n’roll.

You can here a longer interview with the head curator of exhibition, Jacqueline Springer, a former music journalist herself turned lecturer and events curator, about how she and her team organised a display that spans centuries of history, up to our days and the latest innovation in music, including the current exchange with African producers and songwriters.  

"The stories in Act III are what inspired the title 'The Music is Black: A British Story'. This is the British story," said Springer. 

For instance, the sound system culture from Jamaica and reggae came to Coventry and Bristol. "Then that's smoothed out for trip hop, which still has the ingredients of turn-tablism, of singing like lovers rock," Springer adds, "but there's a political undertone, but there's also an emotional interrogation."

African connections

The exhibition also shows how musicians from Nigeria, Ghana, Jamaica, Guyana and other former British colonies, found a place to produce their music in Britain, like Sade (born Helen Folasade Adu in 1959 in Ibadan in Nigeria), Seal, the Mad Professor (born in Guyana), or more recently Little Simz, Arlo Parks, Sekpta and Stormzy.

In the episode, we dig into the history of the genres invited outside London, like the Bristol sound, invented in the 1990s, with and around the rapper and producer Tricky, whose family members have roots in Jamaica, Africa and England

Finally, we also go to the city to hear how the producer Tim Norfolk, of the duo The Insects, is releasing a record produced there in 1994 with the late Zimbabwean singer-songwriter Biggie Tembo, leader of the then successful Bhundu Boys, never heard in over 30 years.



Spotlight on Africa is produced by RFI's English language service. Episode edited and mixed by Melissa Chemam and Erwan Rome.




Mali update: Uncertain future