India, Italy, Kenya Forge Historic AI Trilateral Partnership for Africa

India, Italy, and Kenya have announced a historic trilateral partnership to co-design and deploy scalable, sovereign AI pathways across Africa. The initiative, leveraging India's digital public goods, aims to develop voice-enabled AI solutions for low-connectivity environments and local languages. The partnership was announced on the sidelines of the Global AI Impact Summit in New Delhi, where PM Modi unveiled the "MANAV Vision" for ethical AI. UNDP's AI Director praised the agreement as a crucial step to elevate the Global South's role in global AI governance.

Key Points: India, Italy, Kenya Launch AI Trilateral Partnership

  • Co-design sovereign AI for Africa
  • Leverage India's digital public goods
  • Focus on low-connectivity & local languages
  • Aim for 100 AI Diffusion Pathways by 2030
3 min read

UNDP AI Director lauds India's leadership as India, Italy, Kenya announce AI trilateral partnership

UNDP lauds India's leadership as new AI partnership with Italy and Kenya aims to deploy sovereign, scalable AI solutions across Africa.

"Together, with India's leadership... we are actively working to identify and shape the public goods of AI - Keyzom Ngodup Massally"

By Amrashree Mishra, New York, February 23

Keyzom Ngodup Massally, AI Director at the United Nations Development Programme, on Monday hailed India's leadership in the Global South as the country announced a historic trilateral partnership on artificial intelligence with Italy and Kenya on the sidelines of the global AI Impact Summit.

The strategic trilateral partnership was announced to co-design and deploy scalable, sovereign AI pathways across Africa, leveraging India's digital public goods. It was signed in the presence of Nandan Nilekani; Adolfo Urso, Minister of Enterprises and Made in Italy and William Kabogo Gitau, Kenya's Cabinet Secretary, Ministry of Information, Communications and the Digital Economy.

In an exclusive interview with ANI, Keyzom Ngodup Massally, Director of the AI Hub for Sustainable Development at UNDP, said, "The trilateral agreement between Italy, India, and Kenya embodies this shared commitment. It positions the public and private sectors as strategic partners to elevate the Global South's role in global AI governance. Together, with India's leadership in digital public goods for the global south, we are actively working to identify and shape the public goods of AI--responsible pathways for its diffusion that prioritise equity, trust, and accountability--so AI can benefit humanity at scale and leave no one behind."

At the Summit, Ekstep Foundation's People plus Ai along with UNDP, Anthropic, IIITB, ORF, governments of Kenya and Italy announced new partnerships in support of the goal to develop 100 AI Diffusion Pathways by 2030 to create breakthroughs in AI adoption.

Massally further told ANI, "The discussions in Delhi marked a meaningful step forward, shifting focus from high-level concepts to the practical architecture of impact: building ecosystems that integrate finance, technology, and international cooperation to deliver real value."

As per a statement by the UNDP, leveraging the G7-endorsed AI Hub for Sustainable Development, the arrangement unites ecosystems in India, Italy and Kenya to collectively work with local public and private sector innovators to scale voice-enabled AI solutions tailored to African contexts, focusing on low-connectivity environments, local languages, and data ownership.

"The cooperation aims at catalysing smart ecosystem pathways, combining India's innovation expertise, digital public goods and know-how, Kenya's on-the-ground ecosystem and leadership in Africa, and Italy's AI Hub's focus on horizontal unlocks and industrial partners to deliver concrete, Africa-led progress and marks a crucial step toward building sovereign, green AI infrastructure that is Africa-led", the UNDP statement said.

Earlier, while in Delhi, Massally underlined how UNDP is working on making sure AI adoption serves people and the planet and noted how it is utilising AI to help support diffusion pathways where AI can speak local languages, and make a difference in the lives of farmers, women entrepreneurs-- in India and across the world.

The Global AI Impact Summit 2026 held in New Delhi was the first to be hosted in the Global South, and brought together policymakers, industry leaders, academics and civil society representatives to deliberate on responsible AI governance and inclusive technological advancement.

At the Summit, Prime Minister Narendra Modi unveiled the comprehensive "MANAV Vision" for AI, reflecting on the technology to have ethical foundations.

Its inauguration was attended by over 20 Heads of Government and 59 Ministerial-level representatives, alongside government representatives from 118 countries. The Summit also convened 100+ global AI leaders, CEOs and CXOs, and over 500 leading AI experts from across the world.

The Summit witnessed unprecedented international participation, reaffirming India's growing leadership in shaping the global Artificial Intelligence discourse.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As someone working in tech, I'm impressed by the practical focus. Moving from "high-level concepts" to building actual ecosystems with finance and tech integration is exactly what's needed. India's DPI model can be a game-changer for Africa.
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Priya S
Wonderful news! The emphasis on helping farmers and women entrepreneurs through voice-enabled AI in local languages is so important. Hope this partnership delivers tangible benefits on the ground and isn't just another MoU.
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Rohit P
While this is a positive step, I hope we ensure that our own digital divide is addressed simultaneously. We must not forget rural India while building solutions for Africa. The MANAV Vision sounds promising, but execution is key.
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Karthik V
Hosting the Global AI Summit in Delhi and launching this trilateral partnership shows India's soft power is growing. This is strategic - combining our innovation, Kenya's local knowledge, and Italy's industrial links. A smart move for the Global South.
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Michael C
The focus on "sovereign, green AI infrastructure" is critical. Too often, developing nations get locked into foreign tech stacks. An Africa-led approach with Indian expertise could create a more balanced global AI landscape.

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