
IGAD Region Enhances Cybersecurity and AI Collaboration to Address Increasing Digital Threats
Experts and officials met in Nairobi on June 18, 2025, to enhance cybersecurity and AI cooperation in the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) region. Representatives from Djibouti, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Kenya, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, and Uganda attended a three-day seminar addressing digital threats in East Africa.
Speakers emphasized unified digital security approaches as rapid digitalization exposes services and enterprises to cyberattacks. Kenya's Cabinet Secretary for Information, Communications, and the Digital Economy, William Kabogo, stressed the importance of robust policies and collaboration for regional security.
IGAD Executive Secretary Workneh Gebeyehu proposed harmonized regional cybersecurity governance, including standardized law enforcement, shared technical benchmarks, and coordinated incident responses, to strengthen resilience against cyber threats.
The seminar launched the IGAD Digital Security Skills Initiative, aimed at training law enforcement, judicial members, and IT professionals in advanced digital forensics, threat detection, and AI-powered security analytics. Head of the IGAD Security Sector Program, Nejat Abdulrahman, highlighted AI's role in predictive threat detection while ensuring privacy and civil liberties.
To continue these efforts, the IGAD Cybersecurity Symposium will be held on July 20-22, 2025, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. This initiative aims to further strengthen Africa's cybersecurity frameworks.
Improving cybersecurity and AI capabilities will not only address immediate threats but also support regional resilience, protecting infrastructure and fostering economic growth. Africa Security Analysis notes that this focus broadens strategies to counter transnational challenges like climate change impacts.
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