Zimbabwe’s recent launch of its national Artificial Intelligence strategy marks an important and commendable step forward. At a time when nations across the world are grappling with how to position themselves in the rapidly evolving digital economy, Zimbabwe has signalled clearly that it intends to be part of the conversation rather than a passive observer. This is no small achievement. Strategy is not implementation, but it is direction and direction matters.
Artificial intelligence is not simply another technological advancement. It represents a fundamental shift in how societies process information, make decisions, and deliver services. For countries like Zimbabwe, AI presents both an opportunity and a risk. It offers the potential to leapfrog traditional development constraints in sectors such as healthcare, agriculture, and public administration. Yet, if approached without sufficient depth and foresight, it also risks reinforcing existing inequalities and introducing new forms of dependency.
The newly launched strategy demonstrates encouraging awareness of these dynamics. It recognises the importance of innovation, the need to build capacity, and the role of governance in guiding technological adoption. It aligns Zimbabwe with broader continental and global efforts to engage responsibly with artificial intelligence. These are strong foundations, and they deserve to be acknowledged.
However, as with any ambitious national strategy, the real question lies not in what is written, but in what is built. The next phase of Zimbabwe’s AI journey will require moving from vision to practical, grounded implementation. This transition will depend on addressing several critical areas that will ultimately determine whether AI becomes a genuine development asset or remains an aspirational concept.
The first of these is data. Artificial intelligence systems are only as effective as the data on which they are trained. For Zimbabwe, this raises important questions about data ownership, data governance, and data relevance. Who owns the data that will power these systems? Where will it be stored? How will it be protected? And perhaps most importantly, will it reflect the realities of Zimbabwean communities? Without deliberate investment in locally relevant datasets, there is a risk that AI systems deployed in Zimbabwe will be shaped by external contexts that do not fully align with local needs.
The second area is language and context. Zimbabwe is a multilingual society, with Shona, Ndebele, and English forming a complex linguistic landscape. Yet many AI systems are trained predominantly on English-language data from Western contexts. If AI tools are to be truly effective — particularly in sectors such as healthcare and public service delivery — they must be able to understand not only the language, but also the cultural and contextual nuances through which people express themselves. Language is not merely a communication tool; in many cases, it carries meaning that is essential for accurate interpretation and decision-making. Ignoring this dimension risks excluding large segments of the population from the benefits of AI.
The third consideration is the move from strategy to real-world use cases. Successful AI adoption will not be defined by policy documents alone, but by carefully chosen, high-impact applications. In Zimbabwe, sectors such as healthcare, agriculture, and public administration present immediate opportunities. For example, AI could support disease surveillance, improve clinical documentation, strengthen agricultural planning, and enhance public service delivery. These are not abstract possibilities; they are practical areas where targeted pilot projects could demonstrate value, build confidence, and create momentum.
Healthcare, in particular, offers a compelling lens through which to understand both the potential and the responsibility of AI adoption. In clinical settings, decisions carry real consequences for human lives. AI systems that assist with diagnosis, documentation, or patient triage must therefore be accurate, reliable, and contextually appropriate. More importantly, they must operate in a way that strengthens, rather than weakens, the relationship between clinician and patient. Trust is central to healthcare, and any technology introduced into this space must earn and sustain that trust.
This brings us to a broader and often underemphasised dimension of AI adoption: leadership. Technology alone does not transform systems. People do. The successful integration of AI into Zimbabwe’s institutions will depend on leaders who can navigate complexity, manage change, and ensure that ethical considerations remain at the forefront. Leadership will be required not only at national level, but within organisations — in hospitals, universities, and public institutions, where AI will ultimately be implemented.
Zimbabwe has taken an important first step by articulating a national vision for artificial intelligence. The opportunity now is to translate that vision into systems that are inclusive, responsible, and grounded in the country’s realities. This will require investment in data, sensitivity to language and culture, a focus on practical applications, and strong, ethical leadership.
Artificial intelligence must serve humanity. In Zimbabwe, it must also understand our people, our languages, and our lived realities. If approached with clarity and care, AI has the potential to strengthen not only our systems, but the very fabric of how we deliver care, services, and opportunity to our citizens.
The strategy is a beginning. The real work, as always, lies ahead.
Dr Brighton Chireka is a Zimbabwean-born UK-based primary healthcare physician, healthcare leadership educator, and international consultant. He writes and speaks on the responsible adoption of artificial intelligence in healthcare, focusing on human-centred innovation, ethical data governance, and the future of African health systems.
He can be contacted at brighton@docbeecee.co.uk







