Also known as: AFS · Africa Forward Summit: Africa–France Partnerships for Innovation and Growth · The Summit · 2026 Summit on Clean Cooking in Africa · Summit on Clean Cooking in Africa
… The deal follows an agreement signed during the Africa Forward Summit held in Nairobi in May between Gatanga Industries, Palais des Thés and Equity Group, aimed at expanding market access for Kenyan speciality tea and connecting producers directly to premium international consume …
… The unveiling follows a landmark agreement signed during the Africa Forward Summit between Gatanga Industries, Palais des Thés and Equity Group, aimed at expanding market access for Kenyan specialty tea and connecting producers directly to premium international consumers. …
… The unveiling follows a landmark agreement signed during the Africa Forward Summit between Gatanga Industries, Palais des Thés and Equity Group, aimed at expanding market access for Kenyan specialty tea and connecting producers directly to premium international consumers. …
… Kenya’s participation was positioned not as that of an observer, but as an agenda-shaping partner, advancing priorities agreed at the Africa Forward Summit held in Nairobi in May 2026. …
… According to reports, South Africa was excluded from the summit after claims that US President Donald Trump had threatened to boycott the summit if South Africa's Cyril Ramaphosa attended. …
… Through a press statement issued after the summit held from June 15 to 17, 2026, Ruto said Kenya’s participation had helped advance key reforms aimed at lowering the cost of capital for developing countries and unlocking private investment flows into infrastructure, health, and f …
Audio By VocalizeFlags of the Group of Seven (G7) member nations and invited partner countries flutter at the summit venue in Évian-les-Bains, France, on Tuesday, June 16, 2026, as leaders gather to discuss global economic stability, security and climate change. …
The Standard reports tensions between President William Ruto and IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva over a confidential graft report, with billions of shillings reportedly caught in the dispute between the two parties.
Why it matters
IMF tensions with Ruto over corruption findings remain a headline story with direct implications for Kenya's economic credibility and international relations.
The Standard reports tensions between President William Ruto and IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva over a confidential graft report, with billions of shillings reportedly caught in the dispute between the two parties.
Tea farmers are set to earn more from purple tea produce after the launch of premium Kenyan tea brands in Paris, with four Kenyan orthodox tea brands securing shelf space in French retail outlets. The move leverages value addition and aims to position Kenyan tea as a premium branded product in Europe, following an agreement signed in May between Gatanga Industries, Palais des Thés, and Equity Group.
Kenya's Purple Tea was unveiled in Paris at the Hôtel de Crillon, marking the product's entry into the global market and part of Kenya's push to position premium specialty teas beyond commodity exports. The showcase followed a landmark agreement between Gatanga Industries, Palais des Thés, and Equity Group to expand market access for Kenyan specialty tea.
Kenya's distinctive Purple Tea was unveiled in Paris at the Hôtel de Crillon, marking a milestone in positioning the specialty tea in premium international markets. The launch followed a landmark agreement between Gatanga Industries, Palais des Thés, and Equity Group to expand market access for Kenyan specialty tea.
An opinion piece argues that Nairobi has become an important centre for international dialogue and diplomacy over the past decade, with the ability to convene diverse actors—governments, investors, and development partners—around shared interests now representing a key form influence in global affairs.
President William Ruto told G7 leaders at a summit in France that Africa should be engaged as an equal trade partner rather than an aid recipient, and that the continent wants to help shape emerging technologies like artificial intelligence rather than only consume them.
President William Ruto represented Kenya at the G7 Summit in Évian, France (15–17 June 2026), positioning Kenya as an agenda-shaping partner. He argued for a shift away from aid dependency toward mutually beneficial partnerships and investment-driven development, and stated that Africa can no longer be viewed through a deficit lens in global decision-making.
Lawyer Evans Ogada has argued that Kenya's attendance at the G7 summit in France represents a diplomatic blunder that may negatively impact East African Community policies, contending that President Ruto's international travels are transactional and lack benefit for Kenya's economic growth.
President Ruto participated in the G7 Summit in France as an agenda-shaping partner and stated that Kenya will benefit from G7-backed financial reforms including guarantees, risk-sharing instruments, and improved debt restructuring frameworks aimed at lowering capital costs for developing countries. Ruto positioned Africa as a partner in global growth and raised concerns over "capital injustice" and outdated perceptions affecting African borrowing costs.
President William Ruto told Group of Seven leaders at a summit in France on June 16 that Africa must be treated as an equal partner in global affairs, not a problem to be solved or recipient of charity. Ruto called for UN Security Council reform to ensure Africa's voice, saying extraction and aid-dependent relationships are no longer acceptable.
President William Ruto is travelling to Evian, France for the G7 Leaders' Summit, where he will champion Africa's economic agenda and push for reforms to the global financial system. He received a personal invitation from French President Emmanuel Macron and will present Africa's common position as shaped during the Africa Forward Summit in Nairobi last month.
France is seeking to expand its influence in East Africa and Kenya after losing ground in the Sahel, but protests against French President Macron's participation in Nairobi's Africa Forward Summit signal rising anti-French sentiment in the region over France's colonial legacy.
President William Ruto has departed for France to attend the Group of Seven Leaders' Summit, where Kenya—invited alongside Brazil, India and South Korea—will press for reform of the global financial system, lower borrowing costs for African economies, expanded trade and investment access, and continental positions on artificial intelligence governance. On the summit's sidelines, Ruto is scheduled to hold bilateral meetings with heads of state and engage technology company executives from OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, Meta and Anthropic to seek partnerships for job creation and digital infrastructure investment in Kenya.
President William Ruto said he will travel to France this week to attend the G7 Summit, where he plans to champion Africa's development agenda and advocate for reforms to the global economic order. Ruto cited Kenya's participation in major international forums as evidence of the country's growing diplomatic influence and defended his frequent foreign travel as necessary for Kenya's economic growth and global decision-making.
President William Ruto has defended his packed schedule of foreign trips and local county tours, saying effective leadership requires active engagement both at home and abroad to accelerate Kenya's economic transformation. Ruto, who is expected to travel to France for the G7 Summit, dismissed criticism by insisting that hard work is necessary for Kenya to compete with countries that have achieved higher levels of development.
President William Ruto defended his frequent local and international travels, saying every trip aims to advance Kenya's development and strengthen the country's global position. Speaking at a church event in Kajiado County, Ruto dismissed criticism from opposition leaders, calling travel part of his responsibility as Head of State.
The 2026 Summit on Clean Cooking in Africa, scheduled for July 9-10 in Nairobi, has been postponed due to ongoing uncertainties and evolving circumstances affecting international travel and participation. A high-level virtual session will proceed on July 9 instead.
The 2026 Summit on Clean Cooking in Africa, originally scheduled for July 9-10 in Nairobi, has been postponed due to travel and participation uncertainties. A high-level virtual session will proceed on July 9 via the International Energy Agency's digital platforms.
A Mo Ibrahim Foundation report released in May 2026 found that limited freedom of movement and connectivity for Africans, despite the African Union's Free Movement of Persons Protocol, are hampering the implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Area agreement. While Mali, Niger, Rwanda, and São Tomé and Príncipe have ratified the Protocol, other countries remain closed due to security concerns, reciprocity issues, and lack of political commitment.
Kenya will host the Africa Forward Summit on May 11–12, 2026, co-hosted by President William Ruto and French President Emmanuel Macron, bringing together more than 30 heads of state and over 1,500 business leaders to advance investment and deepen Africa's global partnerships.
A Standard opinion piece argues that President William Ruto's image has suffered from fuel price hikes and a costly private-jet trip to Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan following the Africa Forward Summit, which paralyzed the country as matatu operators protested the rising cost of living.
The Social and Inclusive Business Camp East Africa Programme held a networking session in Nairobi bringing together entrepreneurs, investors, policymakers, and development partners to accelerate inclusive and sustainable energy transition solutions across East Africa.
Kenya became the first Anglophone African country to host the Africa Forward Summit, with French President Emmanuel Macron using the Nairobi meeting to argue that France is pivoting toward investment-led, mutually beneficial relations rooted in respect for sovereignty, even as France's influence has narrowed following military juntas in Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger severing ties with Paris.
Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi has warned Kenyans to prepare for tougher economic times driven by global instability, citing surging fuel prices from the Middle East conflict and other emerging global trends as challenges that cannot be quickly resolved.
Chad's Supreme Court rejected an appeal by opposition leader Succes Masra, a former prime minister arrested in May 2025 and sentenced to 20 years in prison for inciting violence and complicity to murder. Human Rights Watch said his continued detention demonstrates the government's intolerance of dissent.
During a State Visit to Kazakhstan, First Lady Rachel Ruto visited the Asyl Miras Center for children with autism and called for Kenya to adopt similar models of comprehensive support, awareness-raising and professional training to serve children with Autism Spectrum Disorder and their families.
An opinion piece examining France's Sh3.5 trillion in commitments announced at President Ruto's Africa Forward Summit, questioning whether such investment comes with conditions that compromise African sovereignty, noting the President repeated the word "sovereignty" eight times in his closing address.
An opinion piece observes that unlike the past, when artists faced exile for speaking truth to power, the Kenyan government now uses celebrities to shape political narratives, citing their prominent roles at the Africa Forward Summit as evidence of a shift in the relationship between government and artists.
More than 1,500 participants, including 30 African heads of state, attended the Africa Forward summit in Nairobi co-hosted by Presidents William Ruto and Emmanuel Macron to reposition Africa-France relations around co-creation. France pledged $27 billion in public and private investments across Africa, while Kenya and France signed 11 bilateral agreements worth 150 billion shillings in areas including logistics, digital infrastructure, renewable energy, and health.
An opinion piece argues that African progress depends on removing travel barriers between nations. The article references the Africa Forward Summit 2026 in Nairobi, co-hosted by Presidents William Ruto and Emmanuel Macron, where leaders discussed trade, industrialisation, infrastructure and investment.