- A fragile framework for AI: CAIGA’s loose structure raises doubts about its ability to regulate high-risk technologies
- Autonomy under pressure: Weak governance leaves Africa exposed to external control amid AFRINIC’s collapse
What happened: A continental vision with limited authority
As artificial intelligence spreads rapidly across African economies, policymakers are searching for a governance model that can balance innovation, risk and sovereignty. The Continental Africa Internet Governance Architecture (CAIGA) has been promoted as a coordinating framework for internet and digital policy, including AI. Yet critics argue that CAIGA lacks the institutional strength needed to regulate technologies that increasingly shape data flows, labour markets and state power.
At present, CAIGA does not function as a regulator. It has no binding legal mandate, no enforcement capacity and no clearly defined accountability mechanisms. Its policy documents emphasise cooperation and dialogue, but stop short of outlining how standards would be enforced or who would be responsible when governance fails. For AI systems that raise concerns around surveillance, bias and cross-border data use, such ambiguity is a serious weakness.
The debate over CAIGA cannot be separated from the wider governance crisis engulfing AFRINIC. Years of mismanagement have culminated in an organisation unable to conduct credible elections or command trust among its members. The annulment of the June 23 board election over an unverified proxy dispute, and the discarding of valid votes, reinforced perceptions that democratic governance within AFRINIC has become unworkable.
This collapse matters because AI governance depends on stable internet infrastructure oversight. Without a functioning regional internet registry, Africa’s ability to manage IP resources, data routing and digital resilience is already compromised. Critics warn that layering a weak AI policy framework like CAIGA on top of a broken institutional base risks compounding failure rather than fixing it.
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ICANN and the erosion of bottom-up governance
The vacuum created by AFRINIC’s dysfunction has drawn increased intervention from ICANN, prompting accusations of overreach. ICANN’s attempted involvement in AFRINIC’s leadership disputes, and its adoption of the ICP-2 compliance framework outside its usual multistakeholder processes, have fuelled concerns that global actors are positioning themselves to reshape Africa’s governance landscape.
In this context, CAIGA offers little resistance. Without independence or authority, it risks legitimising external influence rather than protecting regional autonomy. Critics argue that AI governance shaped under such conditions would reflect global priorities, not African social, economic or cultural realities.
Some stakeholders argue that reform, not reinforcement of weak structures, is the only viable path forward. Cloud Innovation Ltd, AFRINIC’s third-largest member, has led calls to dissolve the failed registry entirely, describing its governance as irreparably broken. Their demand that ICANN and the NRO immediately appoint a new regional internet registry reflects a belief that continuity matters more than preserving discredited institutions.
For AI governance, the lesson is clear. Africa needs institutions that are trusted, accountable and genuinely bottom-up. Without addressing the foundational failures exposed by AFRINIC, frameworks like CAIGA risk becoming symbolic gestures, leaving Africa’s AI future shaped by forces beyond its control.
