Nairobi, 28 January, 2026 / 3:35 pm (ACI Africa).
The Apostolic Nuncio in Kenya has cautioned against approaches to technology and data governance that reduce human beings to mere statistics, calling for ethical systems that protect vulnerable individuals and uphold human dignity.
In his Tuesday, January 27 speech during the Sensitive Data Sovereignty Conference, which was held at Tangaza University (TU), the Nairobi-based institution that is jointly owned by 22 Institutes of Consecrated Life and the Societies of Apostolic Life (ICLSAL), Archbishop Hubertus van Megen said that ethical systems should prioritize trust, responsibility and accountability to safeguard vulnerable groups especially the refugees and the sick.
“We must not observe vulnerability from afar through abstract data extraction, but accompany it through structures of trust, stewardship, and accountability. We should never reduce persons to statistics and numbers,” Archbishop van Megen said.
The Holy Father's representative in Kenya encouraged Africans to focus on applying knowledge that adds value to the life, harmony, and social cohesion of the communities.
“This affirms that true knowledge begins not with the accumulation of data, but with reverence, humility, and ethical orientation,” he said at the event that was held on the theme, “African Data and AI Sovereignty for Sensitive Health and Humanitarian Data.”



