15 June 2026
The recently completed AI4EAC Innovation Challenge showed that Africa’s next generation of AI innovators is not waiting for the future to materialize – they are already leading the way, using their AI and coding skills to solve local problems and shape a more inclusive tomorrow
This six-month regional AI skills and innovation programme combined AI training, mentorship and webinars with practical challenges in education, agriculture, health and finance, culminating in a two-day innovation challenge held in March 2026
Organized under the East African Community (EAC) AI Alliance, and implemented with partners including UNESCO Campus Africa, Germany, the Zindi network of African data scientists, the Inter-University Council for East Africa (IUCEA), the East African Science and Technology Commission (EASTECO), and the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), the challenge drew close to 1,000 students from 57 universities across eight countries: Burundi, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, Rwanda, Somalia, South Sudan, the United Republic of Tanzania and Uganda.
Harnessing AI to fill labour market gaps
Among the challenge categories, the Skills2Job education track challenge, led by UNESCO, explored one of the region’s most urgent questions: how to better connect education, skills training and employment opportunities in rapidly changing labour markets.
The Skills2Job Challenge tasked participants with building machine learning systems capable of predicting the five most relevant occupations from just five skills. Using real-world job postings data from UNESCO’s Global Skills Tracker, competitors developed AI-powered recommendation systems designed to improve career guidance, workforce mobility and skills-based hiring
When a system underperforms, the answer is not always a more complex model. Sometimes the real breakthrough comes from understanding where information is being lost and fixing that bottleneck first. In this challenge, candidate retrieval was that bottleneck
Breaking an overreliance on formal credentials
The Technical University of Mombasa team – comprised of team members Emmanuel Cherutich, Karuiki Njenga, Bryan Mwaura, Vincent Kututa – known collectively as ‘Team Adventurers’ secured second place. Their solution approached the challenge as a text-classification problem rather than a traditional recommendation system, noting that labour markets in Africa often over-rely on formal credentials while overlooking transferable skills, such as communication, management and sales.
Looking beyond the competition, Team Adventurers see significant potential for AI-driven skills matching
Across the EAC’s integrated market, where workers increasingly move across borders, a shared skills language could become the common currency of regional employment – fairer, faster and more human than a CV alone
Time for transferable skills to take centre stage
© UNESCO
Eugene Mutembei, a student at Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology and founder of Technetium Kenya, took third place
The challenge reinforced Eugene’s belief that the current disconnect between education and employment in Africa is not necessarily a lack of talent, but a lack of vision as to how existing skills can translate across different industries.
We need to shift the narrative from credential-based hiring to dynamic matching based on skills, ensuring young professionals understand the versatile value of what they already know
Empowering women in AI
© UNESCO
The AI4EAC Innovation Challenge also highlighted the importance of inclusion in AI and digital innovation. Fatima Hassan from Jamhuriya University of Science and Technology in Somalia received the Top Female Award
Winning this award makes me want to become an example for other Somali girls. I want them to know that they can study AI, data science and technology, and that they can contribute to the future of Somalia and Africa
Fatima’s ambition is the point. AI4EAC is opening doors for young women who rarely see themselves reflected in the fields of coding, software development and AI, across Somalia and the wider region.
A regional AI ecosystem unfolds
The hunger among young people for AI solutions and skills training in East Africa is real. The AI4EAC Innovation Challenge just gave it a channel for development. As AI continues to reshape economies and societies, initiatives such as AI4EAC show that the future of innovation in Africa will be driven not solely by access to technology, but by the talent, creativity and determination of its young people.
UNESCOCampus Africa and its partners support this vision by strengthening the link between higher education, innovation ecosystems and employment opportunities, ensuring that young Africans are not only prepared for the future of work, but empowered to shape it.
What comes next for our winners? Stay tuned to the LinkedIn UNESCO – Education Group where we will check in with these bright sparks in the African AI innovation space in our “AI4EAC: Where are they now?” series.
