On April 30, 2025, a major milestone in Ivory Coast’s digital security landscape was achieved as the Autorité de Régulation des Télécommunications de Côte d’Ivoire (ARTCI) officially transferred its cybersecurity and digital trust mandates to the newly established Agence Nationale de la Sécurité des Systèmes d’Information (ANSSI). This significant institutional shift reinforces the country’s ambition to bolster its national cybersecurity posture amid the accelerating digital transformation and rising cyber threats
The Ceremony: A Symbol of Strategic Transition
The official handover ceremony, held under the leadership of the President of ARTCI’s Regulatory Council, brought together key stakeholders from both ARTCI and ANSSI. The event symbolized not just a procedural transition, but a deeper commitment to unified cybersecurity governance and a more robust defense infrastructure in Ivory Coast.
The Director General of ARTCI, in his address, welcomed this institutional evolution, affirming ARTCI’s readiness to support the operational growth of ANSSI. He emphasized the importance of collaboration in strengthening the digital governance architecture and enhancing resilience against cybercrime.
Meanwhile, the Director General of ANSSI acknowledged the pivotal support received from the Minister of Digital Transition and Digitization as well as the Minister of the Interior and Security. Both ministers played a crucial role in executing the vision of the Head of State regarding cybersecurity governance reform.
The new head of ANSSI further expressed gratitude to the leadership of ARTCI, particularly its Regulatory Council President and Director General, for their unwavering support and strategic guidance throughout the handover process. He reaffirmed a commitment to continuity, emphasizing that the collaboration between ARTCI and ANSSI would remain strong to collectively address growing cyber risks and support national digital acceleration.
Why This Matters: Elevating Ivory Coast’s Cyber Resilience
The institutional transfer marks a foundational step in the national cybersecurity roadmap. With cyberattacks becoming more frequent and sophisticated, particularly across sectors such as finance, telecommunications, and government services, it is imperative for nations to centralize and fortify their cyber response mechanisms.
By consolidating these critical missions under a specialized agency ANSSI Ivory Coast positions itself to build a more agile, coordinated, and technically proficient cybersecurity apparatus. This move also aligns with global best practices, where dedicated national cybersecurity agencies, like France’s ANSSI or the U.S. CISA, lead the defense of national digital infrastructures.
What ANSSI Will Handle Going Forward
With its new mandate, ANSSI becomes the national authority responsible for:
- Protecting critical information infrastructures.
- Monitoring and responding to national cyber threats.
- Leading incident response and digital crisis management.
- Providing security recommendations and guidelines.
- Coordinating with international CERTs and cybersecurity bodies.
- Promoting trust and transparency in digital services.
Strategic Vision: From National Need to Regional Leadership
Ivory Coast has made clear its ambition to not only secure its own digital space but also emerge as a regional cybersecurity leader in West Africa. The establishment and empowerment of ANSSI is a stepping stone toward that goal.
ANSSI will also be instrumental in implementing Ivory Coast’s national digital security strategy, supporting public and private sector preparedness, and aligning domestic policies with international frameworks such as the Budapest Convention on Cybercrime and the African Union’s Convention on Cybersecurity and Personal Data Protection (Malabo Convention).
Conclusion:
The official transfer of cybersecurity responsibilities from ARTCI to ANSSI marks a pivotal moment for Ivory Coast. It sends a strong signal: the nation is taking cyber resilience seriously and is committed to modernizing its approach in the face of 21st-century threats. This move not only enhances national readiness but lays the foundation for greater regional influence in shaping Africa’s cybersecurity future.
In an increasingly digital world, protecting data, infrastructure, and digital sovereignty requires bold institutional decisions decisions like this one.
As ANSSI takes the helm, all eyes will be on its capacity to translate this mandate into action. The future of Ivorian cybersecurity has entered a new chapter strategic, centralized, and future-ready.




