With the CCIS, co-building Central African digital
We have formalized a partnership with the Central African Internet and Security Cell (CCIS). Beyond the agreement, it is a story of shared convictions: that of a Central African Republic taking its digital future into its own hands, and making it safer, more modern and more useful to everyone.
Who the CCIS is
The CCIS is a public body under the authority of the Presidency of the Republic. Its mission fits in one sentence: to make the Central African Republic a safe and trustworthy digital society. Day to day, it works to modernize and secure communication networks, to promote a trusted internet and to support the country’s digital transformation. In short, it is a central player in national cybersecurity and digitalization.
What we have carried, from day one
Our ambition has not changed since our earliest days: to put technology at the service of the Central African Republic’s development. With IKOUĒ Academy, we train talent. With IKOUĒ Factory, we support entrepreneurs. With IKOUĒ Connect, we build a bridge between the diaspora, investors and project leaders. Closing the digital divide, strengthening human capital, opening up the Central African Republic: that is the common thread running through everything we undertake.
Why this partnership makes sense
Working with public institutions is nothing new for us. We have already forged a partnership with the ONI around training, and supported the Ministry of Finance and Budget in strengthening its digital capabilities.
Partnering with the CCIS is a natural extension of that momentum. Where we bring our technical expertise and our capacity for innovation, the CCIS brings its deep understanding of the State’s cybersecurity and digital governance challenges. The two complement each other, and that is precisely what makes this meeting of minds so promising.
Co-building concrete things
What excites us most is what comes next. We are not signing an agreement for the sake of it: we want to co-build concrete solutions together. Strengthening the security of systems, modernizing digital public services, developing platforms that are genuinely useful to Central Africans. Step by step, delivering tangible results rather than promises.
Conclusion
This partnership with the CCIS is one more stone in the edifice we have been building from day one: a digital ecosystem serving the development of the Central African Republic. We thank the CCIS for its trust, and we look forward to building what comes next, together.