AI-driven border surveillance is spreading across west Africa. What this means for migrants’ rights

29 mars 2026 | Philippa Osim Inyang, Senior Researcher, Nigerian Institute of International Affairs
New biometric and AI border systems in west Africa promise better security but may also undermine privacy, increase discrimination and limit free movement.
 Site référencé:  The Conversation (Africa)

The Conversation (Africa) 

Bobi Wine’s decision to flee Uganda points to a shrinking landscape for opposition politics
1er/04/2026
Insects in the tropics are already near their heat limits – climate change could push many beyond survival
1er/04/2026
Maternity health services in Nigeria are failing women : 4 steps to better care
31/03/2026
Kenya’s new infrastructure fund is long overdue – but design flaws could limit its impact
31/03/2026
South Africa’s MeerKAT telescope is mapping previously invisible spaces between galaxies – and it’s found 60 new cosmic structures
31/03/2026
Retraction : we have removed an article about the transatlantic slave trade
31/03/2026