Nigeria’s capital city, Abuja, came alive as policymakers, innovators, and global tech leaders gathered for the 18th International Conference on Theory and Practice of Electronic Governance (ICEGOV 2025) a landmark event that reaffirmed the country’s ambition to lead Africa’s digital revolution.
At the heart of the conference, held at the Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Centre, was a clear message: Nigeria is ready to shape the future of digital governance through innovation, research, and collaboration.
A Renewed Digital Vision
Guided by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, which prioritizes economic reform, infrastructure development, good governance, and digital inclusion, Nigeria used the ICEGOV 2025 platform to reaffirm its commitment to driving a people-centered digital economy.
Leading this charge were Dr. Bosun Tijani, minister of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy, and Kashifu Inuwa, director-general of the National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA).
Together, they echoed a unified vision: technology must not only fuel economic growth but also build trust, transparency, and efficiency in governance.
Setting the Global Digital Governance Agenda
Co-chaired by Prof. Tshilidzi Marwala, Rector of the United Nations University and UN Under-Secretary-General, alongside Dr. Tijani, the 18th edition of ICEGOV, themed “Shaping the Future of Digital Governance through Cooperation, Innovation, and Inclusion”, brought together experts from academia, government, and industry to explore how technology can improve public service and social inclusion.
Prof. Marwala, in his keynote, called for the responsible and inclusive development of artificial intelligence (AI), stressing that AI must serve humanity, not divide it.
“Artificial intelligence is shaping many areas of our lives, but it must be designed so that it does not leave anyone behind. AI will remain suboptimal until it works equally for all people, including Africans,” he said.
He urged leaders to democratize AI by ensuring that citizens have not only access to the technology but also a collective voice in deciding its use, a call that resonated strongly with Nigeria’s digital inclusion agenda.
Tijani: Innovation Must Serve Humanity
In his keynote address, Dr. Bosun Tijani described Nigeria as standing at the intersection of innovation, youth, and digital transformation.
Dr. Bosun Tijani, minister of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy“The state of a society reflects the ideas that dominate it. When good ideas strike, nations prosper; when bad ideas prevail, nations decay,” he said.
He introduced a thought-provoking model, the Source Balance Ratio, explaining how diverse ideas from government, civil society, academia, and the private sector must align to create effective digital policies.
Dr. Tijani emphasized that technology should always be guided by ethics and research rather than politics or profit.
“If our ideas are driven solely by short-term gains, we end up with regulations that react to innovation rather than guide it,” he cautioned.
NITDA’s Commitment to Digital Skills and Public Infrastructure
Echoing the Minister’s vision, Kashifu Inuwa described ICEGOV 2025 as a milestone in Nigeria’s journey to becoming a digital governance powerhouse.
Kashifu Inuwa, director-general of the National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA)He highlighted several ongoing initiatives under the Ministry’s strategic roadmap, Accelerating the Nation’s Collective Prosperity through Technical Efficiency, built on five pillars: Knowledge, Policy, Infrastructure, Trade, and Innovation.
Among the achievements he cited:
- National Digital Literacy Framework: to equip every Nigerian with digital skills from early education to adulthood.
- Collaboration with the Ministry of Education: to integrate digital literacy into school curricula by next year.
- 3 Million Technical Talent (3MTT) Programme: training Nigerians in high-demand digital skills.
- Civil Service Digital Training Initiative: with over 24,000 public servants already enrolled.
- Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI): development of a national data exchange platform and a Centre of Excellence for DPI to promote trust, transparency, and interoperability in governance.
“Digital transformation is not just about technology; it’s about improving how we serve citizens. Governance must meet people where they are, online,” Inuwa remarked.
Collaborating for Africa’s Digital Future
The conference drew a distinguished lineup of dignitaries, including Prof. Suwaiba Said Ahmad, Minister of State for Education; Mrs. Didi Esther Walson-Jack, Head of the Civil Service of the Federation (represented by Mrs. Fatima S.T. Mahmood); Senator Shuaibu Afolabi Salisu, chairman, Senate Committee on ICT & Cybersecurity; and Stanley Adedeji, chairman, House Committee on ICT.
Senator Shuaibu Afolabi Salisu, chairman, Senate Committee on ICT & CybersecurityThey commended the Federal Government’s leadership in advancing digital governance, AI ethics, and innovation ecosystems, noting that sustained progress will depend on multilateral collaboration, institutional capacity-building, and stronger digital public infrastructure.
Nigeria’s Leadership on the Global Stage
As ICEGOV 2025 concluded, one message rang clear: Nigeria’s digital reform agenda is not a local ambition, it’s a continental mission.
With its growing investment in digital literacy, AI policy frameworks, and public sector innovation, Nigeria is positioning itself as a key player in shaping the future of electronic governance in Africa.
In the words of Dr. Tijani:
“Digital technologies are no longer just economic tools; they reshape our societies and our citizenship. Our responsibility is to ensure that innovation is guided by ethics, inclusivity, and the public interest.”
The post Nigeria Showcases Vision for Inclusive Digital Governance at ICEGOV 2025 appeared first on Tech | Business | Economy.

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