Vice President Senator Kashim Shettima hosted a high-level delegation from the MIT Kuo Sharper Centre for Prosperity and Entrepreneurship at the Presidential Villa in Abuja. The meeting was centered on the Kuo Sharper Foundry Fellowship (2025–2026), a transformative initiative aimed at bridging the gap between African startups and global capital.
Lauding the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) for its “transformative impact,” Shettima highlighted a staggering statistic: the MIT ecosystem has raised over $1.5 billion and created 30,000 direct jobs globally over the past two decades.
1. The Foundry Fellowship: Accelerating the African Engine
Led by Executive Director Dina Sherif, the Foundry Fellowship is an eight-month leadership program designed for established African entrepreneurs who have already scaled their businesses and are now seeking to transform entire regional ecosystems.
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Nigeria’s Leadership: Sherif identified Nigeria as the continent’s leading startup hub, noting that the country’s innovators are “rewriting the post-colonial narrative” through sheer dynamism.
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The 2025–2026 Cohort: The current session includes fellows from across Africa, focused on sectors like Deep Tech, Agribusiness, and Renewable Energy.
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Ecosystem Integration: The program facilitates “ecosystem tours,” allowing African founders to study innovation models at MIT while connecting with Silicon Valley and Boston-based venture capital networks.
2. Strategic Imperatives: “Unity of Purpose”
Vice President Shettima’s address to the delegation was a clarion call for pan-African collaboration. He argued that while individual success is commendable, the continent’s true potential lies in “closing ranks.”
The Shettima Doctrine for African Prosperity:
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Resource Fusion: Combining Africa’s human capital (the world’s youngest population) with MIT’s resource mobilization networks.
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Bold Governance: Reaffirming President Bola Tinubu’s “Renewed Hope” agenda as a platform that is “unafraid of taking bold decisions” to reposition the economy.
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From Potential to Tangible Results: Shifting the narrative from “Africa has potential” to “Africa has impact,” focusing on job creation that directly affects livelihoods.
3. Impact Metrics: MIT’s Global Footprint (2006–2026)
| Metric | Achievement |
| Capital Raised | Over $1.5 Billion |
| Direct Jobs Created | 30,000+ |
| Active Ventures | 400+ Foundry and Student Fellows |
| Countries Impacted | 67+ Represented in Global Fellowships |
4. What’s Next for Nigerian Startups?
Following this visit, the Kuo Sharper Centre has pledged improved support for Nigeria-based startups through two primary tracks:
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Deep Tech Program: A collaboration (initially launched in Botswana) that will now offer expanded mentorship to Nigerian scientists and engineers looking to commercialize lab research.
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Access to Material Impact: Connection to the $750 million Material Impact fund, specializing in science-based solutions for health and agriculture.
“Africa is the new frontier and the future belongs to the continent, but its people must unite to transform potentials into tangible results.” — VP Kashim Shettima
