Moorosi is a senior researcher on the Distributed AI Analysis Institute and has dropped in for the event from the mountain kingdom of Lesotho. Wearing her signature “Mama Africa” headwrap, she makes her approach by the crowded corridor.
Moments later, a cheerful set of Nigerian music begins to play over the audio system. Spontaneously, folks pop up and collect across the stage, waving flags of many African nations. Moorosi laughs as she watches. “The vibe on the Indaba—the group spirit—is admittedly sturdy,” she says, clapping.
Moorosi is likely one of the founding members of the Deep Studying Indaba, which started in 2017 from a nucleus of 300 folks gathered in Johannesburg, South Africa. Since then, the occasion has expanded right into a prestigious pan-African motion with native chapters in 50 international locations.
This yr, practically 3,000 folks utilized to affix the Indaba; about 1,300 had been accepted. They hail primarily from English-speaking African international locations, however this yr I observed a brand new inflow from Chad, Cameroon, the Democratic Republic of Congo, South Sudan, and Sudan.
Moorosi tells me that the principle “prize” for a lot of attendees is to be employed by a tech firm or accepted right into a PhD program. Certainly, the organizations I’ve seen on the occasion embrace Microsoft Analysis’s AI for Good Lab, Google, the Mastercard Basis, and the Mila–Quebec AI Institute. However she hopes to see extra homegrown ventures create alternatives inside Africa.
That night, earlier than the dinner, we’d each attended a panel on AI coverage in Africa. Specialists mentioned AI governance and known as for these creating nationwide AI methods to hunt extra group engagement. Individuals raised their arms to ask how younger Africans might entry high-level discussions on AI coverage, and whether or not Africa’s continental AI technique was being formed by outsiders. Later, in dialog, Moorosi advised me she’d prefer to see extra African priorities (similar to African Union–backed labor protections, mineral rights, or safeguards towards exploitation) mirrored in such methods.
On the final day of the Indaba, I ask Moorosi about her desires for the way forward for AI in Africa. “I dream of African industries adopting African-built AI merchandise,” she says, after a protracted second. “We actually want to indicate our work to the world.”
Abdullahi Tsanni is a science author based mostly in Senegal who makes a speciality of narrative options.

