Technology
GTBank Becomes a Direct Collection Bank for UMEME

Guaranty Trust Bank (Uganda) Limited has been appointed as a Direct Collection Bank for UMEME Limited, the largest energy distribution company in Uganda. With this status, the public can now pay electricity bills (post-paid bills) and purchase electricity units (prepaid bills) across the counters in all the branches of the bank.
Before securing this enhanced status, and using its robust technology platforms and partnership with other Direct Agent of UMEME, the public were able to purchase prepaid units (UMEME YAKA) through the bank’s USSD banking channel, *237# and through the bank’s internet banking channel. Both services would continue to be available under the Direct Collection Bank status that has now been assumed.
GTBank is proud to join the league of other Ugandan banks that are acting as Collecting Banks for UMEME as this status would bring a lot of further convenience to the bank’s existing customers and the general public. This is against the backdrop of GTBank’s prompt and excellent service delivery capabilities.
In addition, the Direct Collection Bank Status would enable the bank to enhance the collection process and improve the convenience to the public by deploying additional electronic driven channels that the bank is known for in order countries such as Nigeria and Ghana.
GTBank Uganda’s Managing Director, Mr. Lekan Sanusi commented, “our approach is to identify customers’ need and to stubbornly purse their satisfaction. Today, we are delighted to have this service as our teeming customers who have been demanding for it. We are pleased to have been granted the opportunity to be of service to UMEME in this capacity and it is our desire to make a major difference in the shortest possible time for the convenience of the public at large by putting at their disposal additional convenient platforms beyond cash payment across the counters”
It should be noted that GTBank has also partnered with other institutions such as Uganda Revenue Authority Kampala Capital City Authority, National Water and Sewerage Corporation and Mbarara University of Science and Technology for collection of taxes, utilities and school fees.
Guaranty Trust Bank (Uganda) Limited is part of the GTBank group with operational presence in 10 African countries and a full-fledged commercial banking subsidiary in the United Kingdom.
GTBank has consistently played a leading role in Africa’s banking industry. The GTBank brand is regarded by industry watchers as one of the best run financial institutions across its subsidiary countries and serves as a role model within the financial service industry due to its bias for world class corporate governance standards, excellent service quality and innovation.
GTBank Plc has been a recipient to numerous awards, these include Best Bank in Nigeria by Euromoney, Bank of the Year by EMEA Finance and African Bank of the year by Africa Banker Magazine.
Corporate Affairs (GTBank Uganda)
Technology
Unstoppable Africa 2025: Africa’s AI Ambitions and Digital Future Go Global

Major projects and initiatives that are set to position Africa at the heart of global innovation, notably the expansion of the continent’s AI infrastructure, were announced today at Unstoppable Africa 2025 in New York as CEOs convened to discuss Africa’s place in the global economy. This marks a significant step in enabling the continent’s stakeholders to develop local AI solutions designed to address some of Africa’s most pressing challenges.
Zimbabwean billionaire, Founder and Executive Chairman of Econet Global and Cassava Technologies, Strive Masiyiwa, announced that steps are underway to establish Africa’s first network of AI factories. Powered by NVIDIA GPUs, the facilities will be completed by the end of 2026, setting the stage for homegrown innovation and accelerating Africa’s participation in the global AI economy.
Another announcement came from Meta, presented by Kojo Boakye,Vice President, Public Policy Director for Africa, Middle East & Turkey. The company signalled upcoming investment opportunities in Africa’s digital ecosystem, highlighting its confidence in the continent’s growing tech and AI potential.
These initiatives reflect a shift toward locally led solutions and long-term planning, with a focus on robust systems, adoption of advanced technologies, and capital investment to drive regional integration and global competitiveness.
The second day of Unstoppable Africa 2025, flagship event of the Global Africa Business Initiative (GABI), united business leaders, African heads of state, global investors, and international institutions to accelerate the continent’s economic transformation. New commitments in infrastructure, advanced technologies and investment highlighted growing confidence in Africa’s private sector.
In the financial services sector, the Africa Finance Corporation (AFC) in collaboration with African Pension and Social Security Institutions launched the ‘Africa Savings for Growth’ initiative to explore ways to channel African institutional savings into longer-term investments that support inclusive growth. The continent-wide initiative builds on AFC’s 2025 analysis identifying at least $1.17 trillion in institutional assets across Africa, much of it still allocated to short-term, low-yield instruments.
The Global Africa Business Initiative launched two new GABI Action Pathways focused on digital transformation and healthcare aiming to connect businesses, governments, and innovators working in sectors critical to Africa’s competitiveness and resilience.
The Healthcare Action Pathway aims to improve access to medical services through digital tools, build stronger regional supply chains, attract investment, and support the growth of Africa’s healthcare workforce. The Digital Transformation Action Pathway focuses on upgrading government services, expanding internet access and digital infrastructure, training people for future jobs, helping small businesses with tech and funding, and promoting responsible use of AI and data.
Discussions on Day Two focused on new partnerships, Africa’s digital growth, and the continent’s thriving sports and creative industries, including music and fashion.
The forum concluded by highlighting Ava DuVernay, acclaimed director, screenwriter, producer, and founder of ARRAY; 15 year-old Ellyanne Wanjiku Chlystun-Githae, Climate & Health Champion at Seeds for Leadership; Mpumelelo Tevin Mhlongo, Paralympic champion and triple world record holder; Marcus Samuelsson, chef, restaurateur, and author; and international singer-songwriter, Tiwa Savage, who also performed at the end of the event. Their inspiring contributions echoed the forum’s central message of empowerment, innovation, and sustainable progress across the continent.
Closing the forum, Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations, Amina J. Mohammed said, “When people say Africa is resilient, they’ve got a different definition to resilience than we have. Africa’s resilience is about how we build on what we have and how we strengthen our markets, our economies and our democracies and I believe that the values and principles that we all hold are important. Unstoppable Africa is a space to remind ourselves that this is who we are, it is our narrative, on our terms that we go forth.”
Unstoppable Africa is the leading African business forum held outside the continent. Hosted by United Nations Secretary General António Guterres and H.E. Mahmoud Ali Youssouf, Chairperson of the African Union, the event took place just ahead of the 80th session of the UN General Assembly in New York. Unstoppable Africa aims to accelerate the continent’s economic transformation and empower Africa to take a leading role in shaping the markets of the future.
Technology
Kaspersky warns travelers: AI-powered attacks are targeting hotel guests

Between June and August 2025, Kaspersky’s Global Research and Analysis Team (GReAT) discovered a new wave of cyberattacks by a threat group called RevengeHotels, which targets hotels to gain access to guests’ payment information. The group has been operating since 2015 and has since upgraded its methods. The threat actor is now using Artificial Intelligence (AI) to make their attacks more effective and reach additional regions. Analysis shows that many of the new malicious programs used in these attacks contain code likely generated with AI, making them more sophisticated and harder to detect.
While hotels in Brazil have been the main target to date, such cyberattacks have also been reported in other countries around the globe. And considering that countries in Africa, including South Africa and Kenya, are popular tourist destinations, and Nigeria a popular business travel destination, it is important to consider that no country or hotel is immune to falling victim.
How the attacks work
The threat actor sends phishing emails directly to hotel staff, often disguised as requests for reservation or job applications. Once a hotel employee interacts with these emails, malware called VenomRAT is installed on the hotel’s systems, giving attackers access to guests’ payment data and other sensitive information. The emails often look convincing, coming from legitimate-looking websites.
“Сybercriminals are increasingly using AI to create new tools and make their attacks more effective. This means that even familiar schemes, like phishing emails, are becoming harder to spot for a common user. For hotel guests, this translates into higher risks of card and personal data theft, even when you trust well-known hotels,” comments Lisandro Ubiedo, expert at Kaspersky’s Global Research and Analysis Team.
To stay safe, Kaspersky recommends:
- Even if an email seems friendly, treat links and attachments with care. To protect your company, use solutions from the Kaspersky Next product line that provide real-time protection, threat visibility, investigation and response capabilities of EDR and XDR for organisations of any size and in any industry.
- Cybercriminals often distribute fake email messages mimicking email notifications from an online store or a bank, luring a user to click on a malicious link and distribute malware. If attackers are specifically targeting your organisation, the email text may be more customised, mimicking services or scenarios familiar to your company. With that in mind, fine-tune your antispam settings and never open attachments sent by an unknown sender.
- Try not to open unexpected files sent by you massively. They may be ransomware or even spyware, even attachments from official-looking emails.
Technology
Nigerian Risk Expert Unveils NaijaShield™, Africa’s First AI-Powered Stress Testing Engine

Nigerian-born financial risk specialist Oyindamola Ogunruku, currently a senior market risk analyst at Goldman Sachs, has developed a groundbreaking invention called NaijaShield™, an artificial intelligence-driven stress testing engine designed to transform how banks and regulators in frontier economies anticipate and manage financial shocks.
Traditional stress testing models were built for the stable conditions of developed markets and have proven inadequate for economies like Nigeria, where inflation, volatile exchange rates, and abrupt policy shifts create unique vulnerabilities. NaijaShield™ tackles this problem by combining machine learning, regulatory alignment, and predictive analytics to create a dynamic system that can simulate real-world crises in real time. The invention uses a risk detection engine to process market data, a simulator to model events such as currency crashes or oil price slumps, a scorecard generator to highlight exposures, and a regulatory module that syncs results with Central Bank of Nigeria requirements. Its final layer is a decision dashboard that gives auditors, executives, and compliance teams actionable insights at a glance.
Ogunruku describes NaijaShield™ as an intelligent early warning system that can help African banks strengthen resilience, prevent systemic risks, and build investor confidence. She has urged Nigerian regulators to establish sandbox environments where tools like NaijaShield™ can be tested safely before full deployment, noting that its impact could extend beyond Nigeria to other frontier markets with similar instability.
Her career reflects the combination of local insight and global expertise that makes this innovation possible. From designing adaptive risk scorecards at fintech firms in Lagos to managing market risk oversight at Goldman Sachs in the United States, she has consistently demonstrated an ability to bridge advanced analytics with real-world banking challenges. With peer-reviewed publications on AI in financial stress testing, anomaly detection, and green fintech, the unveiling of NaijaShield™ underscores her standing as a pioneer at the intersection of artificial intelligence, finance, and regulatory innovation.
“The future of financial oversight is not just digital — it is intelligent,” Ogunruku said. “NaijaShield™ proves that frontier markets like Nigeria can lead in developing the tools that make global finance safer.”
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