Reading stories from Africa’s business heroes is more than inspiring; it is clarifying.
I was on a flight from Kigali to Houston, on my way to bury my beloved husband, Lee, who had died suddenly from a heart attack. I needed something to distract me from my loss, and out of that moment, this article was born; in his memory. He loved Africa.
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Across the continent, a pattern emerges. Sunday Silungwe saw farmers trapped in poverty and built Good Nature Agro to move them into the middle class. Daniel Mukisa witnessed inefficiencies in transport and built Ridelink to power trade across borders. Amadou Daffe is democratizing technology through Gebeya and AI tools like Gebeya Dala. Diane Mukasahaha is building manufacturing capacity and creating jobs.
Different sectors. Different countries. One common thread: they saw broken systems and built the infrastructure to fix them.
Where my story fits, and why it matters even more urgently.
Like Mukisa, my journey did not begin with technology. It began with loss. For 17 years, I have worked at the grassroots level across Rwanda and beyond; going from door to door, village to village, office to institution, sharing life-saving breast cancer awareness. I did this because the system was not working. Women were uninformed, afraid, diagnosed late, and dying from preventable disease.
I was doing manually what systems should have been doing at scale. Just as Mukisa watched his mother lose money due to failed logistics, I witnessed the devastating consequences of failed health systems, including losing my own sister. I survived because I had access to care in the United States. That contrast has never left me.
Mukisa didn’t stop at witnessing the problem; he built Ridelink, transforming fragmented transport into coordinated infrastructure.
Breast Cancer Initiative East Africa (BCIEA) is now making that same shift. We are introducing IROZA, a WhatsApp-based, AI-powered, trilingual (Ikinyarwanda, English, French) breast health chatbot designed to: deliver trusted information 24/7, reach rural and underserved communities, eliminate stigma through private engagement, and promote early detection and timely action.
We are expanding with AKALIZA, the cervical cancer chatbot, and MUGWANEZA, focused on cardiac health and diabetes, forming a growing ecosystem of AI-powered health assistants to improve access to care.
Spotlighting the missing link in Africa’s growth story
Agriculture drives income. Logistics drives trade. Manufacturing drives jobs.
But health determines whether any of it is sustainable.
A continent cannot rise economically if its people are diagnosed late, too sick to work, or financially devastated by preventable disease. Health is not a side issue. It is the gateway.
Yet, unlike logistics or fintech, health access, especially early detection and awareness, has not been treated as scalable infrastructure.
That is the gap IROZA fills.
If Ridelink is unlocking trade, IROZA can unlock life-saving knowledge at scale. If Good Nature Agro moves farmers into the middle class, IROZA helps ensure they live long enough to remain there. If Gebeya is democratizing digital creation, IROZA is democratizing health access.
This is not a pilot idea. This is a proven grassroots mission, now powered by AI and ready to scale.
What is holding it back is not vision, impact, or need, but limited funding, insufficient strategic partnerships, and the continued underestimation of health as economic infrastructure.
BCIEA cannot scale this alone. Africa has a chance to leapfrog outdated health systems - not by replicating the West, but by building mobile-first, AI-driven, community-rooted solutions.
With the right investment and ecosystem support, IROZA can become part of the backbone of AI-powered primary health access across the continent.
The entrepreneurs featured by Africa’s business heroes remind us that transformation begins with one decision: To stop working around broken systems, and start building the ones that should have existed all along.
At BCIEA, we have made that decision. Now the question is: who will build it with us?
The writer is the founder and director of Breast Cancer Initiative East Africa (BCIEA).