Close Menu
Stratnews GlobalStratnews Global
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • India-Japan Space Cooperation: Key Advances and Future Prospects
    • Marvell Shares Tumble as Data Centre Forecast Disappoints AI Investors
    • Mars’ Mantle Found to Contain Ancient Fragments from Planet’s Chaotic Birth
    • FAA to Consolidate Offices, Move Staff to USDOT Headquarters
    • India Inaugurates Semiconductor OSAT Pilot Line Facility in Gujarat
    • Army Hospital Achieves Milestone with Robotic Cataract Surgery Using ALLY System
    • GST 2.0: India’s Second Tryst with Tax Reform
    • Nvidia Sees Trillion-Dollar AI Future Despite Investor Concerns
    Stratnews GlobalStratnews Global
    Write for Us
    Saturday, August 30
    • Space
    • Science
    • AI and Robotics
    • Industry News
    Stratnews GlobalStratnews Global
    Home » Nigeria’s Multilingual AI Tool Aims to Bridge Digital Divide

    Nigeria’s Multilingual AI Tool Aims to Bridge Digital Divide

    Arushi PandeyBy Arushi PandeyJune 17, 2024 AI and Robotics No Comments3 Mins Read
    Nigeria's

    Nigeria’s Multilingual AI Tool to Boost Digital Inclusion

    Introduction

    When the Nigerian government announced plans to develop a multilingual AI tool to enhance digital inclusion, 28-year-old computer science student Lwasinam Lenham Dilli was thrilled. Dilli had struggled to find datasets to build a large language model (LLM) in his native Hausa language for his final-year project at university.

    Challenges and Importance of Local Language LLMs

    Dilli faced difficulties finding clean data in Hausa and English online. He needed these texts to create an LLM for AI chatbots. He believes that creating local language LLMs ensures that local dialects and languages are included in the AI ecosystem, preventing them from being forgotten.

    Despite the global excitement around AI tools like OpenAI’s ChatGPT, many advanced systems struggle with African languages like Hausa, Amharic, or Kinyarwanda. This leads to nonsensical responses, highlighting the need for more inclusive AI development.

    Nigerian Government Initiative

    Nigeria’s Digital Economy Minister, Bosun Tijani, announced that the new LLM would be trained on five low-resource languages and accented English. The government will partner with Nigerian AI startups and collect local data from volunteers fluent in Yoruba, Hausa, Igbo, Ibibio, and Pidgin. The project will also leverage the expertise of over 7,000 fellows from Nigeria’s tech talent programme, a government scheme to train people in coding and programming.

    Silas Adekunle, co-founder of Awarri, an AI startup involved in the initiative, mentioned the challenges of creating an AI tool that understands Nigeria’s diverse linguistic and cultural landscape. Despite limited resources, the team is using creative methods to train the model, gather data, and label it efficiently.

    Bridging the AI Language Gap

    Africa is home to over 2,000 languages, yet most are underrepresented online. English dominates the digital space, making up around 50% of all websites. Alongside the Nigerian government’s efforts, African startups are also developing AI tools in languages like Swahili, Amharic, Zulu, and Sesotho.

    In Kenya, Jacaranda Health has created the first LLM in Swahili to improve maternal healthcare. Their system, UlizaLlama, built on Meta’s Llama 3, aims to provide personalised responses to expectant mothers, improving the accuracy and speed of their SMS service.

    In South Africa, the Masakhane initiative uses open-source machine learning to translate African languages. Lelapa AI has developed VulaVula, a language processing tool for English, Afrikaans, Zulu, and Sesotho.

    Data Scarcity and Ethical Concerns

    Building LLMs in African languages faces significant challenges, including data availability and ethical concerns. Many African languages have limited data available, unlike high-resource languages like English. Collecting data raises issues of consent, privacy, and compensation, which are not yet regulated in many African countries.

    Michael Michie, co-founder of Everse Technology Africa, highlighted the importance of respecting communities that may not want to share their language data. Vukosi Marivate, co-founder of Lelapa AI, stressed the need for guidelines to prevent exploitation and ensure that the development of LLMs benefits the communities they serve.

    Open-source initiatives like Creative Commons, which allow creators to share their work with conditions, are not always perfect. Proper reimbursement and acknowledgment of original contributors are crucial to ensure that the development of LLMs respects and benefits African languages and their speakers.

    Author

    • Arushi Pandey
      Arushi Pandey

      View all posts
    Featured
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit Telegram WhatsApp
    Arushi Pandey

      Keep Reading

      Marvell Shares Tumble as Data Centre Forecast Disappoints AI Investors

      Mars’ Mantle Found to Contain Ancient Fragments from Planet’s Chaotic Birth

      FAA to Consolidate Offices, Move Staff to USDOT Headquarters

      India Inaugurates Semiconductor OSAT Pilot Line Facility in Gujarat

      Army Hospital Achieves Milestone with Robotic Cataract Surgery Using ALLY System

      Nvidia Sees Trillion-Dollar AI Future Despite Investor Concerns

      Add A Comment
      Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

      Latest Posts

      India-Japan Space Cooperation: Key Advances and Future Prospects

      August 30, 2025

      Marvell Shares Tumble as Data Centre Forecast Disappoints AI Investors

      August 29, 2025

      Mars’ Mantle Found to Contain Ancient Fragments from Planet’s Chaotic Birth

      August 29, 2025

      FAA to Consolidate Offices, Move Staff to USDOT Headquarters

      August 29, 2025

      India Inaugurates Semiconductor OSAT Pilot Line Facility in Gujarat

      August 29, 2025

      Army Hospital Achieves Milestone with Robotic Cataract Surgery Using ALLY System

      August 29, 2025

      GST 2.0: India’s Second Tryst with Tax Reform

      August 28, 2025

      Nvidia Sees Trillion-Dollar AI Future Despite Investor Concerns

      August 28, 2025

      IN-SPACe Facilitates Transfer of ISRO Technologies to Boost Indian Manufacturing

      August 28, 2025

      Egusi Seeds from Nigeria Soar to Space as a Symbol of African Heritage

      August 28, 2025

      Subscribe to News

      Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

      • Astronomical Events
      • Space Missions
      • Industry News
      • Science
      StratNewsGlobal Tech
      Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn YouTube
      © 2025 StratNews Global, A unit of BharatShakti Communications LLP
      • About Us
      • Contributors
      • Copyright
      • Contact
      • Write for Us

      Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.