For years, Konvergenz Network Solutions operated quietly. The tech company had a firm grip on major cybersecurity and digital projects in East Africa but remained out of the public spotlight.
That changed in 2024 after it surfaced as the shadowy force behind a massive Sh104.8 billion contract linked to President Ruto’s universal healthcare agenda.
Now, concerns are mounting over how Konvergenz wins multimillion-shilling government deals with little scrutiny.
Its ties to top lenders, parastatals, and foreign tech giants raise even more questions. Who really owns Konvergenz? And what role do legal proxies play in shielding its identity?

Konvergenz officials ignored repeated queries about their involvement in infrastructure projects. If they hold the country’s highest road-building credentials, why is there no record of actual work? [Photo: X/Konvergenz NS]
Profit or Plunder? Inside the Rise of Konvergenz Tenders
Konvergenz Network Solutions began in 2014 as a low-profile cybersecurity company. Founders Asha Abdi Sheikh and Mohamed Abdi Yunis each held 50% of the firm.
Initially, it quietly secured contracts with top global tech brands like Microsoft, IBM, Dell, Huawei, Cisco, and Avaya.
In Kenya, it struck deals with nearly every major bank—KCB, Equity, Cooperative, and Credit Bank.
It also served high-profile public institutions: Kenya Power, KenGen, the National Social Security Fund, and the now-defunct NHIF, which has since morphed into the Social Health Insurance Fund (SHIF).
Its reach wasn’t limited to Kenya. Konvergenz spread across Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, and Ethiopia, embedding itself in East Africa’s critical digital infrastructure.
Despite handling sensitive national assignments, the company stayed under the radar. Its top officials—Issa Mohamed, Abdul Sheikh, and Abdi Samatar—admitted as much in an interview at their Fourth Avenue Towers offices in Nairobi.
They noted that most Konvergenz tenders remained low-profile, escaping both media coverage and public interest.
That secrecy came crashing down in September 2024. Safaricom’s announcement of a Sh104.8 billion health digitization project shone an unwelcome spotlight on Konvergenz.
The deal, meant to support Ruto’s universal healthcare plan, thrust the company into the national conversation—and scrutiny.
Mystery Around Road Construction Licensing
Though Konvergenz built its reputation in tech, it quietly secured a license as a road contractor.
On November 10, 2022, the National Construction Authority (NCA) placed it in the elite NCA 1 category—the top tier for construction firms in Kenya.
This raised eyebrows. Despite the license, there are no public records showing that Konvergenz has won any road construction tenders.
Company officials ignored repeated queries about their involvement in infrastructure projects. If they hold the country’s highest road-building credentials, why is there no record of actual work?
And why did a tech firm with no visible experience in construction suddenly enter this space? These unanswered questions deepen the mystery surrounding Konvergenz’s operations—and its real motives.
Shadowy Ownership and Legal Fronts
Things got murky in 2023. Ownership of Konvergenz shifted from its original founders into complex legal structures.
Records now show lawyers owning holding companies that, in turn, own Konvergenz Network Solutions. This legal shielding makes it nearly impossible to identify who actually controls the firm.
Why the sudden shift? Why hide the people behind a company trusted with national security systems, public health records, and possibly even infrastructure?
The web of proxies and legal entities smells of something more than tax planning or routine restructuring.
It suggests an attempt to insulate the real beneficiaries from public scrutiny—just as the company’s profile began to grow.
Even as Konvergenz wins major state contracts, the public knows little about its ownership, finances, or political connections. Yet it continues to win tenders from banks, state corporations, and government ministries with almost no accountability.
Final Thoughts
The Konvergenz tenders raise troubling questions. A company that stayed hidden for a decade has suddenly emerged at the center of Kenya’s biggest public health project.
Its simultaneous registration as a road contractor without visible track records only deepens suspicion.
With vague ownership structures and a history of secrecy, Konvergenz Network Solutions deserves urgent scrutiny. Who is shielding this company? Who benefits from its billions in state contracts?
As more Kenyans demand transparency in public procurement, Konvergenz may soon be forced to step out of the shadows—and into the spotlight.
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