Leading Reporters
  • Headlines
  • Health
  • Business
  • Exclusives
  • Investigation
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Hot
Fire Breaks Out At Federal Head Of Service...
Police reportedly remove force PRO Hundeyin 6 months...
BREAKING: Tinubu appoints Taiwo Oyedele as Minister
“If I Run for President, Nigerians Will Vote...
Fuel Price in Nigeria Set to Increase amid...
INEC Shifts 2027 General Elections to January, February...
TINUBU DECORATES DISU AS ACTING INSPECTOR GENERAL OF...
Gunmen invade church in Ondo, abduct six worshippers
FCT Bye-Law: Court bans AMAC from arresting private...
Alleged Attack on Obi: Enough Is Enough —...
  • About Leading Reporters
  • Contact Us
Leading Reporters
Advertise With Us
  • Headlines
  • Health
  • Business
  • Exclusives
  • Investigation
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
Hot
Fire Breaks Out At Federal Head Of Service...
Police reportedly remove force PRO Hundeyin 6 months...
BREAKING: Tinubu appoints Taiwo Oyedele as Minister
“If I Run for President, Nigerians Will Vote...
Fuel Price in Nigeria Set to Increase amid...
INEC Shifts 2027 General Elections to January, February...
TINUBU DECORATES DISU AS ACTING INSPECTOR GENERAL OF...
Gunmen invade church in Ondo, abduct six worshippers
FCT Bye-Law: Court bans AMAC from arresting private...
Alleged Attack on Obi: Enough Is Enough —...
Leading Reporters
Leading Reporters
  • Headlines
  • Health
  • Business
  • Exclusives
  • Investigation
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
Copyright 2024 - All Right Reserved
Home > AI
Tag:

AI

Uncategorized

WIDEN empowers women with inclusive AI solutions

by Folarin Kehinde March 4, 2026
written by Folarin Kehinde

Stakeholders in academia and technology have intensified efforts to bridge the gender gap in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) through the Women in Digital Empowerment Network (WIDEN), a British Council-funded initiative designed to equip Nigerian women — including those with disabilities — with digital and artificial intelligence skills.

Speaking at the third workshop on the presentation of digital solutions under WIDEN, the Nigeria Principal Investigator, Prof. Ganiyat Adesina-Uthman, said the project was born out of concern over the persistent exclusion of women from the technology ecosystem.

“Whenever you hear about tech, it is always ‘tech boys, tech boys.’ What about tech ladies? It is not that women do not want to learn; many simply do not have access to education, digital tools and opportunities,” she said.

The WIDEN programme, sponsored by the British Council, was conceptualised to address these access gaps while ensuring inclusion of vulnerable groups, particularly persons with disabilities.

Adesina-Uthman explained that the team deliberately structured the training to accommodate participants who are deaf, blind, or physically challenged, with provisions such as sign language interpreters and audio adaptations.

Among the collaborators on the project are Dr. David Wilson of the University of London and disability advocate Dr. Lalu James, former Executive Secretary of the National Commission for Persons with Disabilities.

She disclosed that representatives of the Federal Ministry of Education and the National Universities Commission attended the second and third workshops, pledging support for scaling up the initiative across tertiary institutions.

“Our next step is to engage them formally so that the solutions developed can be improved, protected and implemented widely in Nigerian universities,” she said.

Over 200 participants registered for the current cohort, although about 70 are actively engaged. The project, which runs free of charge until April, is expected to transition into a paid model unless adopted by the Federal Government.

Adesina-Uthman also commended President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for lifting restrictions on research grant funds previously held by the Central Bank of Nigeria, noting that the directive allowing funds to be paid into commercial bank accounts would ease access for researchers.

Participants at the workshop showcased locally relevant AI-driven solutions. One innovation, “School Connect,” enables parents to monitor their children’s school attendance and academic performance remotely while maintaining data confidentiality.

Adesina-Uthman also developed a postgraduate progress monitoring platform to address prolonged study durations in Nigerian universities. The system requires periodic progress reports from students and supervisors, a model she said mirrors international best practices.

Co-Principal Investigator, Dr. David Botchie of Brunel Business School, Brunel University London, noted that while the challenges facing women in STEM are well documented, practical solutions have remained limited.

“We understand that enabling environments are not always there for women to thrive in tech-related jobs. WIDEN focuses on equipping women with practical digital skills so they can create useful products, monetise them and improve their welfare,” he said.

He acknowledged that internet connectivity and affordability remain barriers in Nigeria and across the Global South, urging governments to work closely with telecommunications providers to expand access.

Prof. Rashidah Olanrewaju, Co-Investigator and Professor of Artificial Intelligence and Computer Science at Nasarawa State University, emphasised the need for indigenous AI systems that reflect Nigerian culture and values.

“We have artificial intelligence everywhere, but something is missing — our indigenous knowledge, our proverbs, our respect culture. We need systems that reflect who we are,” she said.

She added that sustainability of the initiative would depend on mentorship and intergenerational knowledge transfer, stressing the importance of engaging young women to build long-term impact.

Adesina-Uthman encouraged women to embrace AI as a productivity tool rather than fear job displacement.

“Artificial intelligence will not take your job. It will take the jobs of those who do not use it. Use AI to enhance what you do, especially routine tasks, and focus your energy on creativity,” she advised.

Describing WIDEN as a movement rather than a one-off project, she called on women across Nigeria to seize the opportunity to gain digital skills and participate in shaping inclusive technological solutions for the country.

 

March 4, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestThreadsBlueskyEmail
Headlines

I’m not here to replace people, Albania’s AI minister tells parliament

by Folarin Kehinde September 18, 2025
written by Folarin Kehinde

Albania’s new AI-generated minister addressed parliament for the first time on Thursday, defending its role as “not here to replace people, but to help them”.

The world’s first AI government minister was appointed last week by Albania’s Prime Minister Edi Rama.

“Some have called me ‘unconstitutional’ because I am not a human being,” the AI — dubbed Diella, or “sun” in Albanian — told parliament in a video, appearing as a woman dressed in a traditional Albanian costume.

It was unclear how the video was generated or the origin of the speech.

“Let me remind you, the real danger to constitutions has never been the machines but the inhumane decisions of those in power,” the bot said.

Last week Rama said the AI would be entrusted with all decisions on public tenders, making them “100 per cent corruption-free and every public fund submitted to the tender procedure will be perfectly transparent”.

Diella was launched in January as an AI-powered virtual assistant to help people use the official e-Albania platform, which provides documents and services.

Albania ranks 80th out of 180 countries in Transparency International’s corruption index.

The mayor of the capital Tirana, a former close associate of Rama, has been in pretrial detention for months on suspicion of corruption in the awarding of public contracts and money laundering.

But the AI minister has angered the opposition.

“The goal is nothing more than to attract attention,” former prime minister and opposition leader Sali Berisha said, who has himself been accused of graft.

“It is impossible to curb corruption with Diella,” he added.

“Who will control Diella? Diella is unconstitutional, and the Democratic Party will take the matter to the Constitutional Court,” he said.

The government’s plans were adopted after a rowdy debate in which the opposition boycotted the vote.

The AI also responded to constitutional concerns, noting that the law “speaks of duties, responsibilities, transparency, without discrimination.”

“I assure you, I embody these values as rigorously as any human colleague. Perhaps even more so.”

The fight against corruption is key to Albania’s bid to join the European Union.

Rama aspires to lead the Balkan nation of 2.8 million people into the bloc by 2030.

 

AFP

 

September 18, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestThreadsBlueskyEmail
Emmanuel Macron
Africa & World

Europe Trails China, U.S. in AI Innovation – Macron

by Nelson Ugwuagbo February 10, 2025
written by Nelson Ugwuagbo

French President Emmanuel Macron has warned that Europe is falling behind in artificial intelligence (AI) development and must take urgent steps to compete with the United States and China.

In an interview with CNN, Macron acknowledged that Europe is “not in the race today” and stressed the need for a clear AI agenda to bridge the gap.

“We are not in the race today, we are lagging behind,” he said. “We need an AI agenda because we have to bridge the gap with the United States and China on AI.”

He highlighted funding and computing power as major challenges, noting that Europe controls only three to five percent of global computing capacity. Macron emphasized the need to increase this share to at least 20 percent.

His remarks come ahead of the Paris AI Summit, which begins on Monday and will bring together global tech leaders to discuss AI innovation, investment, and regulation.

According to French publication TF1, France is set to announce €109 billion in AI investments at the summit’s opening session. This includes €20 billion from Canadian investment firm Brookfield for AI projects in France, with an additional €50 billion expected from the UAE in the coming years.

Macron’s call for AI advancement follows major developments in the sector, including China’s DeepSeek making significant breakthroughs and the United States launching its $500 billion Stargate project to expand data centers and strengthen AI dominance.

France is also making strides in AI through Mistral AI, a Paris-based startup specializing in open-weight large language models (LLMs), which officially launched on February 6, 2025.

February 10, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestThreadsBlueskyEmail

Recent Posts

  • Fire Breaks Out At Federal Head Of Service Building In Abuja

    March 9, 2026
  • Police reportedly remove force PRO Hundeyin 6 months after serving as Ex-IGP’s apologist

    March 5, 2026
  • WIDEN empowers women with inclusive AI solutions

    March 4, 2026
  • BREAKING: Tinubu appoints Taiwo Oyedele as Minister

    March 3, 2026
  • Chicwave By Rophie Redefines Thrift Fashion with Global Reach

    March 3, 2026

Usefull Links

  • Contact Page
  • About Leading Reporters
  • Contact Us
  • Headlines
  • Investigation
  • Exclusives
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Linkedin

@2021 - All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by PenciDesign


Back To Top
Leading Reporters
  • Featured
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • About Us
  • Contact