Akon City Failed, Will Internet Village Succeed?
🛑 What Went Wrong with Akon City?

Akon's vision for a "real-life Wakanda" sparked global excitement. But several factors led to its collapse:
Over-ambition without groundwork: $6 billion for a smart city requires not just vision, but deeply rooted community trust, legal frameworks, and strong institutional partnerships, all of which were lacking.
Dependency on unproven currency (Akoin): The entire project was tied to a cryptocurrency that never achieved scale, making it financially unstable from the start.
Top-down approach: It was driven more by celebrity appeal than grassroots engagement.
Lack of phased implementation: No clear MVP (minimum viable project), just a grand promise that failed to materialize beyond a welcome center.
✅ Why Internet Village Is Different, and Why It Will Succeed
Internet Village isn’t a city built on hype. It’s a movement built on people.
Unlike Akon City, Internet Village is not a speculative mega development.
It is:
🌱 Rooted in Community First, Infrastructure Second
JJ Robinson, the founder, began by walking alone across communities, building trust, offering digital training, and listening before proposing.
The Internet Village ecosystem has already started, not as buildings, but as real digital, vocational, and social activities.
💡 Built on Existing Pain Points, Not Futuristic Fiction
Internet Village is solving actual problems Gambians face:
No access to reliable internet services
No job-ready skills for youth and women
No sustainable digital learning tools
🧱 Incremental & Sustainable Growth Model
It’s growing from the bottom up: One village, one solar Wi-Fi, one digital classroom at a time.
No billion-dollar fantasy, just wireless connectivity to phones, community buy-ins, and open-source partnerships.
Starlink pilot hubs are real, digital literacy programs are active, and students are already being trained.
🤝 Transparent and Inclusive Governance
JJ Robinson built a Constitution, bylaws, and stakeholder-driven model, all open for review.
No “one-man” rule. It’s co-owned by members, partners, cooperatives, and communities.
🔗 Integrated with Global Movements
Internet Village is aligning with:
UNSDG’s
✊ Internet Village Is What Akon City Could Have Been, If It Had Started With People
Akon aimed for a smart city built by fame and capital. Internet Village is building smart communities fueled by resilience, education, and local ownership.
It is:
“A slow grind in silence, not a loud fall from the sky.”
Final Thought
Yes, Akon failed, but he taught us something valuable:
"Africa doesn’t need superheroes. It needs community engineers."
And that’s exactly what Internet Village is creating, one digital villager at a time.
We shall succeed