Ian Katusiime

Ian Katusiime is a Senior Reporter at The Independent covering politics, technology, security, health and international affairs. He is interested in the intersection between emerging technologies and governance. Ian was crowned the best political reporter at the 2025 Uganda National Journalism Awards organised by the African Centre for Media Excellence (ACME). In 2024, he took part in a DW Fellowship on Digital Threats for an investigation on how female activists in Uganda counter online harassment. He has written a paper on Uganda’s foreign policy titled Foreign Policy by Troop Deployment and a follow-up paper on the troop drawdown

in the African peacekeeping mission in Somalia. Ian has contributed to a book on the global arms trade titled Monstrous Anger of the Guns. In 2022, he took part in a Youth for Policy Migration Fellowship organised by Konrad Adenauer Stiftung.

Article published includes,

Raw data, Refined Elsewhere

Chasing 5G: Uganda’s digital leap faces reality check

The cost of Uganda’s internet shutdown

Imani Henrick Luvanga

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Imani is a multi-award-winning journalist, digital content creator, and media professional with over five years of experience in broadcasting, digital advocacy, and leadership. She is currently the Programs Manager for Crown TV and a Multimedia Journalist at Crown Media Tanzania, where she leads content development and audience engagement projects. At just 25, she became the youngest Station Manager at Kings FM Radio, transforming it into the leading media house in Tanzania’s Southern Highlands. Imani is also the Co-founder of Mwanga Hub, an NGO focused on empowering youth, women, and marginalized groups through digital rights and inclusion. She hosts Dig It with Imani: The Podcast, tackling issues such as digital rights and online gender-based violence. As a certified digital rights trainer with DW Akademie, she mentors journalists and collaborates with global organizations like the Thomson Reuters Foundation. Her work has earned her national recognition and multiple journalism awards

Article published by Henrick

The Cost of Accessing the Internet

Youth and the future of public digital infrastructure in Tanzania

From NIDA to Jamii Namba: The journey of digital identity in Tanzania

DPI youth innovator

Kei Emmanuel Duku

Kei Emmanuel Duku is a dynamic and motivated multimedia and data journalist from South Sudan with over five years of experience. His expertise lies in reporting on critical issues, including natural resources (with a focus on gold smuggling), wildlife trafficking, environmental crimes, and climate change. He possesses a robust background in technology, fact-checking, health, gender-based violence, human rights, and sports reporting, showcasing a diverse array of journalistic interests and a dedication to impactful storytelling. Over the last five years, he has been awarded 10 regional and global reporting grants with different organisations. His work has received various awards including from the Media Development Institute for health reporting, the Union of Journalists of South Sudan where he won the 2024 award for reporting on sports, and earning the title of Second Runner-Up in the 2024 African Media Development Foundation-Nigeria competition in the Climate Change reporting category.

Articles published by Kei

South Sudan Cyber Crimes and Computer Misuse Bill 2025 Passed to the Third Reading

Cash Crunch Hits MoMo Users As MTN South Sudan Service Fails

Legislator Demands Overhaul of South Sudan’s Cybercrime Bill

Ronald Musoke

Ronald is a multi-award-winning journalist with over a decade of journalism experience. He is an African Union Media Fellow (2023/24), and primarily reports for The Independent, Uganda’s premier political and business magazine. Ronald’s diverse work has also been published by several international publications including; The Independent (UK), Infonile, The Niles, Climate Tracker and Kulturaustausch Magazine (Germany). He has deep interest in development journalism and particularly focuses on politics and public policy, business and economics, public health, the environment (climate change and conservation), the extractives industry, regional integration, all forms of human rights, the humanitarian crisis, diplomacy and international affairs, among several other beats. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Arts (English & Communication Skills) and a Post Graduate Diploma in Environmental Journalism &  Communication (both from Makerere University, Kampala). He is concluding his Master’s degree in Diplomacy and International Studies at Uganda Martyrs University, Nkozi.

Articles by Musoke.

Are Ugandan farmers trading coffee beans to Europe for data?

How data centres are reshaping Africa’s power market

Are disabled Ugandans being left out of the digital ID system?

Hassan Istiila

Hassan Istiila, Somalia |

Hassan Istiila is a Mogadishu-based journalist with over a decade of experience reporting for local and international media. His work focuses on migration, governance, digital divides, climate change, environmental issues, fact-checking, and the rights of marginalised communities. As Somalia undergoes a digital transformation amid deep-rooted infrastructure and information access challenges, Hassan sees journalism as a tool to promote transparency and inclusion. He is particularly interested in how Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) can transform fragile states like Somalia, where systems such as national digital ID and e-governance are emerging but underreported—especially from the perspective of equity and accountability.

Through this fellowship, Hassan aims to deepen his reporting on how these digital shifts impact public service delivery and the daily lives of ordinary citizens, especially women, youth, and internally displaced people.

Articles published by Hassan

A smart national ID powers Somalia’s Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) vision

Somalia’s E-Visa breach exposes gaps in Digital Public Goods oversight