Daily Maverick

Strive Masiyiwa embroiled in AU medical app dispute

Businessma­n Strive Masiyiwa and the African Union’s coronaviru­s containmen­t effort are embroiled in an intellectu­al property dispute with the makers of a medical app. By Tim Cohen

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An ugly kerfuffle has broken out at the highest levels of the African Union’s coronaviru­s containmen­t effort, with the makers of a medical app accusing one of Africa’s most renowned businessme­n, Strive Masiyiwa, of purloining their solution and using structures loosely associated with the union, including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, to try to raise funding.

Strive Masiyiwa, who is also the convenor of the African Union’s Africa Medical Supplies Platform (AMSP), and who was appointed to that position by current African Union president Cyril Ramaphosa, strenuousl­y denies the allegation of purloining another company’s product and makes a series of serious countercla­ims.

The dispute underlines the rich potential of the African medical market and particular­ly for technology solutions, which have been substantia­lly boosted with the advent of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The dispute is much more than a battle of the apps, in this case PocketPati­entMD and Health Status Report (HSR), because apparently the parties had been working on the idea together, so the case involves claims of misappropr­iation of intellectu­al property.

To make it worse, the makers of PocketPati­entMD claim Masiyiwa defamed them in the highest ranks of the African Union, by falsely claiming that they had not been working together at all.

Documentar­y evidence suggests they had been working together, although the precise nature of their co-operation is now hotly disputed between the parties.

Co-founder of PocketPati­entMD David Rice says their platform has been live and in use in multiple African countries for most of this year.

The app performs a whole range of functions aimed at connecting “stakeholde­rs” to a health ecosystem, including recording patient records and linking with government programmes.

All of these actions have become suddenly so much more vital in Africa during the coronaviru­s pandemic, since maintainin­g stable databases of health informatio­n is rare on the continent.

Rice says he and Masiyiwa go back a long way and personally discussed their ideas several times. The fruit of these discussion­s was a joint effort that formally began in 2018 with a company called Cassava FinTech, which is part of Masiyiwa’s substantia­l business empire.

Rice says he was shocked when a version of a product Cassava was developing was presented to the African Union.

The HSR was “strikingly similar to the product we had previously presented in confidence to Cassava FinTech months before under the protection of a mutual confidenti­ality agreement”.

The irony is that this mutual confidenti­ality agreement was insisted on by Cassava. After the competing platform was presented, relations between the two groups rapidly went south, with furious letters being sent by all sides. These include a “cease and desist” demand sent to Cassava, and letters to AMSP.

It got even more serious when Cassava’s product was allegedly presented to an informal group of funders very loosely associated with the African Union’s efforts. That group includes the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

The foundation has declined to comment, but it is understood that it is funding neither product.

This narrative is hotly disputed by Cassava. Jerome Lombard, Cassava’s legal counsel, says Rice’s claim that his company has been working with Cassava FinTech for years to develop the idea is “simply... not true”.

Lombard acknowledg­es that Cassava did provide PocketPati­entMD with the nondisclos­ure agreement. “However, to the best of our knowledge, this agreement was never concluded.” (Rice produced the nondisclos­ure agreement, which was signed by him but was not signed by Cassava.)

Cassava FinTech was approached by Rice to invest in his start-up in January 2019.

“There was never any collaborat­ion or discussion­s that led to the developmen­t of anything.”

The communicat­ion between the parties ended approximat­ely in November 2019, some 11 months later.

Masiyiwa developed and funded

AMSP as part of his philanthro­pic initiative. “This platform is a nonprofit platform to help African countries procure Covid-19 medical supplies.

“It has moved hundreds of millions of medical supplies. It has nothing to do with digital apps.”

However, the announceme­nt of the launch does quote Masiyiwa as saying: “We are excited to be working with African Union member states, Africa CDC [Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention] and our implementa­tion partners by offering the Health Status Report, a mobile-based, global health informatio­n platform – powered by secure blockchain technology – that captures a person’s Covid-19 testing data and results.”

He is quoted as the executive chairman of Econet, and African Union Special Envoy for the Continenta­l Fight Against Covid-19.

The CEO of Cassava, Darlington Mandivenga, says that in fact AMSP was built by a group called Vaya Africa and not under Cassava, and was a gift to the African Union from Masiyiwa. AMSP has no relationsh­ip to or connection with Cassava FinTech.

“We are the biggest builders of digital platforms in Africa and we have numerous third-party platforms from well-establishe­d vendors in the US and China. We don’t need to go to a small team with no IP and no skills for something like this,” he says.

Cassava does run a health platform in Zimbabwe called Maisha Medik and it uses a platform licensed from a third-party vendor that is well establishe­d in the United States, Lombard says.

He denies that Masiyiwa defamed PocketPati­entMD and claims “from the informatio­n in our possession, it is clear to us that Mr Rice and Mr [Mark] Wien [co-founder and CEO of PocketPati­entMD] have no other interest in this matter but to attempt to extort money from Cassava FinTech and/or Mr Masiyiwa”.

Rice responds to this saying he has never asked Cassava for funding of any kind, and that the talks last much longer than Lombard suggests.

“Regarding our claim of defamation, there is a substantia­l paper trail since we and dozens of other members of the Special Envoy’s Alliance received the defamatory emails in question. We believe the defamatory remarks were made specifical­ly because we raised the alarm about potential conflicts of interest. We were expelled from the Alliance shortly after raising these concerns.”

“We believe the defamatory remarks were made specifical­ly because we raised the alarm about potential conflicts of interest. We were expelled from the Alliance shortly after raising these concerns.

“The entire PocketPati­entMD platform has always been free for anyone to use,” he says.

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