Kenya calls for inclusive AI governance at UN Global Dialogue in Geneva

Date: 2026-07-06
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By:   Nana Appiah Acquaye

Kenya has called for a more inclusive and implementation-focused global framework for artificial intelligence governance, urging stronger international cooperation to ensure that AI benefits all countries and does not widen existing digital divides.

Delivering Kenya’s national statement at the inaugural UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance, Cabinet Secretary for Information, Communications and the Digital Economy Hon. William Kabogo Gitau said Kenya’s approach is grounded in practical measures aimed at expanding opportunity and shared prosperity through technology.

Speaking on behalf of the government and President William Samoei Ruto, the Cabinet Secretary emphasized that many developing countries continue to face structural challenges in artificial intelligence development, particularly in access to computing power, quality datasets and language representation.

He called for global cooperation that moves beyond principles to concrete implementation, including improved access to affordable compute infrastructure, development of open and representative datasets, enhanced skills development and fair financing mechanisms for institutions responsible for AI governance and deployment.

Kabogo also outlined Kenya’s domestic digital transformation initiatives, highlighting the eCitizen platform, which now provides more than 22,000 government services to over 13 million users. He noted that Kenya has also launched a Government Interoperability Framework designed to integrate public service systems across government agencies.

In addition, he said Kenya is implementing an AI in government training programme developed in collaboration with UNESCO and the University of Oxford, targeting the training of 20,000 public officers by 2027. Kenya is also among five countries participating in a pilot programme on artificial intelligence and robotics education in schools in partnership with the International Telecommunication Union (ITU).

The Cabinet Secretary added that Kenya played a key role in shaping consensus during the WSIS+20 review process as co-facilitator and reaffirmed the country’s commitment to supporting the United Nations as a central platform for global coordination on AI governance.

He said Kenya will continue to advocate for a global AI framework that ensures equitable access to technology and guarantees that the benefits of artificial intelligence are shared widely across all nations.

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