AI Everything Kenya x GITEX Kenya reinforced Nairobi’s growing position as one of Africa’s leading centres for artificial intelligence, digital infrastructure and technology investment, as policymakers, investors and global technology firms converged on the Kenyan capital in May 2026.
Held from 19–21 May 2026, the event combined AI policy dialogue, infrastructure investment discussions and large-scale technology showcases at a time when African governments are increasingly prioritising sovereign AI strategies, digital public infrastructure and regional data-centre expansion.
The three-day event was organised by KAOUN International, the organiser behind the global GITEX portfolio, in partnership with the Office of the Special Envoy on Technology of the Republic of Kenya.
The Inclusive AI Everything Summit opened proceedings on 19 May at the Sarit Expo Centre, while the main AI Everything Kenya Expo took place on 20–21 May at the Kenyatta International Convention Centre.
Organisers positioned the event as a platform to accelerate investment, sovereign AI development and cross-border collaboration across Africa’s rapidly expanding digital economy.
The agenda focused heavily on:
Philip Thigo described the event as a milestone in Kenya’s ambition to shape an AI ecosystem aligned with Africa’s development priorities and digital sovereignty goals.
Government officials, multilateral institutions, investors and technology executives used the summit to discuss how AI and digital infrastructure can support long-term economic transformation across Africa.
As the summit moved into its operational phase, attention shifted toward practical deployment and commercial opportunities.
The AI in Action Forum explored applications across sectors including:
The exhibition component also highlighted East Africa’s growing strategic importance within Africa’s technology landscape.
Participating companies included:
For investors, the exhibitor mix reflected the convergence of several major growth themes, including data centres, cloud infrastructure, cybersecurity, fintech and AI-enabled enterprise systems.
The event also highlighted East Africa’s emergence as one of Africa’s fastest-growing digital regions.
Kenya continues attracting strong venture-capital flows into fintech, logistics, agritech and digital public services, while regional investment in broadband connectivity, cloud infrastructure and digital payments continues accelerating.
Mastercard highlighted the growing role of AI-driven tools in fraud detection, financial inclusion and digital credit systems, reinforcing broader expectations that AI adoption will increasingly shape Africa’s financial services sector.
Meanwhile, ongoing investment in regional data centres and connectivity infrastructure is strengthening the compute backbone needed to support future AI deployment across East Africa.
A recurring theme throughout the event was the growing importance of digital sovereignty and African ownership of AI infrastructure.
Policymakers increasingly emphasised the need for:
The discussions reflected a broader shift underway across Africa’s technology ecosystem — from digital adoption toward infrastructure-led AI deployment and strategic control over data and compute capacity.
AI Everything Kenya underscored Nairobi’s ambition to position itself as one of Africa’s leading gateways for AI investment, digital infrastructure and emerging technology partnerships.
For investors, the key signals emerging from the event include:
As African economies continue accelerating digital transformation strategies, Nairobi is increasingly positioning itself at the centre of East Africa’s next phase of AI-driven growth and infrastructure investment.
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