JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 26 May 2026 - South Africa's emerging developers are building close
to the ground, with many of the strongest solutions at the inaugural
Huawei Code4Mzansi finals focused on systems people use every day:
township retail, healthcare, energy, agriculture, payments and the
creative economy.
The competition was held in partnership with the Department of Small
Business Development. "The Code4Mzansi competition is not just a
celebration of achievement, it is a launchpad for the future," said
Minister Stella Ndabeni, whose department co-hosted the event and
delivered the closing address.
The finals revealed a clear shift from building abstract digital
products to practical tools that help small businesses trade better,
communities access services more easily, and local industries solve
problems faster.
Four finalist teams focused directly on the township economy, with
solutions covering food safety verification for spaza shops, offline
point-of-sale systems built for load-shedding, WhatsApp-native
marketplaces for informal retailers, and community credit systems for
SASSA grant recipients.
Others addressed AI-driven healthcare access, electricity theft
detection, smart agriculture, financial infrastructure for the creator
economy, and AI-generated African music.
Held at Huawei Office Park in Woodmead, the finals brought together more
than 100 attendees, including government representatives, academic
partners, industry leaders and media.
"The quality of the finalist solutions demonstrated the potential of
local innovation to respond to real market needs," said Steven Chen,
Cloud CEO of Huawei Technologies South Africa.
Academic partners included the University of Pretoria, the University of
Johannesburg, the University of the Witwatersrand and the University of
Cape Town.
"Small businesses are the backbone of our economy, and technology is
their greatest accelerator. The participants here today are future
entrepreneurs who will drive South Africa's digital economy forward,"
said Professor Thokozani Shongwe, Vice Dean of Postgraduate Studies,
Research and Internationalisation at the University of Johannesburg's
Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment.
Industry partner rain also attended. Leon Nortje, Principal and Senior
Architect at rain, said the competition offered a strong view of the
country's emerging technology pipeline.
"It is always good to see new projects and new teams working on
solutions that are valuable and industry-related. We will be looking out
for potential new employees," said Nortje.
The winners
The finalists competed for a prize pool of R800,000. MAAT by SIMVAK was
named the overall grand winner and received the Business Value Award,
taking home R300,000. The platform addresses food safety and regulatory
compliance in South Africa's informal retail sector through AI agents,
real-time product recall alerts, and counterfeit detection for the spaza
shop ecosystem.
"The spaza network is the supply chain for most South African households," said SIMVAK founder Shingirayi Mandebvu.
HealthHive by FTCK received second prize in the Business Value Award
category, taking home R200,000, for its AI telemedicine platform that
matches patients with the right medical practitioners based on their
symptoms.
Auraa received the Grand Innovation Award for its AI music engine built
to generate authentic African sound. The platform has been associated
with an album that has crossed one million streams.
The Future Star Award went to e-Khadi, a community credit and stokvel
platform giving SASSA grant recipients access to essentials at their
local spaza shops, supported by AI-assisted credit scoring and fraud
detection.
The People's Choice Award, voted by the public on Huawei's social media
channels, went to DevRift, a semi-finalist in the competition, who took
home R100,000.
Minister Ndabeni delivered the closing address, positioning Code4Mzansi
within the government's agenda for youth entrepreneurship, small
business development and digital inclusion.
"Our task is to ensure that innovation does not remain a moment of
applause, but becomes a pathway to enterprise creation, digital
inclusion, and sustainable growth," she said.
"Thank you to Huawei for being a perfect partner on the journey that we
are travelling, and of course, those that matter most, the developers
who dared to compete," she said.
Code4Mzansi forms part of the global Huawei Cloud Developer Competition.
In its inaugural edition, South Africa attracted more participants than
any other country: 1,041 across 353 teams, including 176 enterprise
teams, resulting in the highest enterprise participation rate among all
competing markets. Twenty semi-finalists were selected before the top
nine advanced to the final.
For the finalists, the work is just beginning. As Minister Ndabeni said,
"Go home today proud. But tomorrow, wake up, build again."
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