Zimbabwe's Securities Exchange Commission just teamed up with local universities to build homegrown anti-money-laundering tech instead of dropping cash on pricey foreign systems.
The competition structure and finalists
The competition structure and finalists
- Four universities qualified: University of Zimbabwe, Midlands State University, Harare Institute of Technology, and NUST.
- HIT and NUST advanced to the finals, each receiving 15,000 dollars in funding.
- NUST won first prize for its AML Risk-Based Supervision prototype design.
- HIT claimed first place in Prudential Risk-Based Supervision and second in AML.
- The initiative arose from a competition where universities created ICT solutions for regulatory challenges.
- SecZim commissioner Tichaona Mushambadope emphasized partnerships producing tailor-made solutions for Zimbabwe's financial sector.
- Capital market regulations guided the process with rigorous vetting from sister organizations.
- The strategy aims to invest in young innovators supporting transparent, tech-led capital markets.
- Computer Science Department head Sibangiso Ngwenya praised his team's collaborative development effort.
- Students and staff worked together after SecZim presented the challenges it faced.
- The prototype could reduce financial crime and strengthen confidence in transactions across sectors.
- Winning validated the university's problem-solving approach according to Ngwenya's assessment.
- Tawanda Makombe from HIT's Business and Management Sciences highlighted valuable student experience gained.
- Automated solutions are expected to close loopholes and boost resource efficiency.
- Zimbabwe can develop its own systems rather than relying on expensive foreign technology.
- The prototypes fit hand in glove with SecZim's regulatory needs per Mushambadope's statement.