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Sovereign Data Infrastructure for Regional Economic Community
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GovernmentDakar, Senegal (Primary Hub)24 months (Mar 2024 - Feb 2026)

Sovereign Data Infrastructure for Regional Economic Community

100% data localization and secure communications for 5 West African nations

Regional Economic Community

Results

Impact Delivered

100%

Data Localization

Achieved

5

Nations Connected

Unified

<8ms

Inter-Capital Latency

Optimized

0

Security Breaches

Maintained

12TB

Daily Processing

Operational

01 / Challenge

The Problem

A regional economic community — a coalition of five West African nations comprising Senegal, Mali, Burkina Faso, Cote d'Ivoire, and Guinea — faced a sovereignty crisis that existed in plain sight but received almost no policy attention: the complete absence of sovereign data infrastructure.

The scale of the dependency was staggering. Ninety-four percent of government data across the five member states was processed on foreign servers — primarily in France, the United States, and the United Arab Emirates. Every tax record, every census dataset, every military communication, every diplomatic cable passed through infrastructure controlled by foreign corporations subject to foreign laws. The implications were not theoretical. Under the U.S. CLOUD Act, American cloud providers can be compelled to disclose data stored on their servers regardless of where the data center is physically located. Under French intelligence law, DGSE can intercept data transiting French networks without judicial authorization. The five nations had zero legal recourse if a foreign government accessed their data through these mechanisms.

The operational consequences were equally severe. Inter-governmental communications between the five capitals relied on commercial email services and messaging platforms with no end-to-end encryption at the server level. Diplomatic correspondence between Bamako and Ouagadougou transited through data centers in Paris. Military coordination between Dakar and Conakry depended on infrastructure that could be disrupted by a corporate service outage in Virginia. There was no secure, sovereign channel for classified communication between the five governments.

The economic dimension compounded the problem. The five nations collectively spent $340 million annually on foreign cloud services — money that left the regional economy entirely and created no local technical capability. No domestic data center workforce was being developed. No local technology ecosystem was being nurtured. The dependency was not merely expensive; it was self-reinforcing, as the absence of local infrastructure made foreign services the only viable option, which further prevented local infrastructure from being built.

In early 2024, the heads of state convened an emergency summit and authorized the creation of a sovereign data infrastructure program. The requirements were absolute: all government data must be processed and stored within the geographic boundaries of the five member states. All inter-governmental communications must be encrypted end-to-end with keys controlled exclusively by the participating nations. The infrastructure must be operated by local engineers, governed by local law, and immune to foreign legal compulsion. Harch Corp was selected as the prime contractor following a competitive evaluation of seven international bidders.

02 / Solution

Our Approach

Harch Corp designed and deployed a comprehensive sovereign data infrastructure — HarchOS Sovereign Cloud — built on three foundational principles: data localization, cryptographic sovereignty, and operational independence.

The infrastructure layer consists of three regional data centers strategically positioned across the member states. The primary hub, a 12MW facility in Dakar, Senegal, serves as the central processing and storage node, equipped with 480 GPU compute nodes for sovereign AI workloads and 8 petabytes of encrypted storage. The secondary hub, an 8MW facility in Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire, provides redundant compute capacity and serves as the disaster recovery site for the primary hub. The tertiary hub, a 4MW facility in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, extends sovereign compute to the landlocked member states and provides geographic diversity for data resilience. All three facilities are powered by Harch Energy's renewable generation pipeline, ensuring that the sovereign cloud is also carbon-neutral.

The network layer connects the five capitals through an encrypted mesh network operating over dedicated fiber optic links leased from regional telecommunications providers and supplemented by Harch Technology's satellite communications backbone. The mesh topology ensures that no single point of failure can isolate any capital from the others. Inter-capital latency averages less than 8 milliseconds — faster than many intra-European connections — enabling real-time secure video conferencing, collaborative document editing, and synchronized database replication between government ministries. The network operates on a zero-trust architecture: every data packet is encrypted at the source, authenticated at every hop, and decrypted only at the intended destination. Quantum-resistant cryptographic algorithms (CRYSTALS-Kyber for key encapsulation and CRYSTALS-Dilithium for digital signatures) protect all communications against future quantum computing attacks.

The platform layer runs HarchOS Sovereign Cloud, a purpose-built operating system for government workloads. The platform provides sovereign AI models trained exclusively on African data and optimized for the five nations' administrative, legal, and linguistic contexts — including support for Wolof, Bambara, Dyula, and French across all government application interfaces. Sovereign language models enable automated document processing, translation between member state languages, and intelligent classification of government correspondence without any data leaving the mesh network. The platform also includes secure email with end-to-end encryption, classified document management with multi-level access controls, and a sovereign identity system that authenticates government users without relying on any foreign identity provider.

The zero-knowledge architecture ensures that even Harch Corp's own engineers cannot access government data. All data at rest is encrypted with keys held exclusively by the member states. All data in transit is encrypted with session keys negotiated directly between endpoints. Harch Corp provides the infrastructure and the platform; the data and the keys remain under the absolute control of the five governments. This architectural decision was non-negotiable from the client's perspective and fundamental to the project's sovereignty guarantees.

03 / Timeline

Implementation

Phase 1: Site Preparation

Months 1-6

Site selection, acquisition, and preparation for all three data center locations. Environmental assessments and regulatory approvals across three jurisdictions. Power infrastructure buildout, including dedicated renewable energy connections from Harch Energy's grid. Physical security installation — biometric access controls, electromagnetic shielding, and Tempest-grade communications security. Recruitment of 120 local engineers for operations training program.

Phase 2: Hardware Deployment

Months 7-12

Installation of compute, storage, and networking equipment across all three facilities. GPU cluster deployment and integration testing. Fiber optic link activation between Dakar, Abidjan, and Ouagadougou. Satellite communications backbone installation for backup connectivity. Initial data migration planning and secure transfer protocol development. Commissioning of uninterruptible power systems and diesel backup generators.

Phase 3: Network & Security

Months 13-18

Encrypted mesh network activation connecting all five capitals. Quantum-resistant cryptographic protocol deployment. HarchOS Sovereign Cloud platform installation and configuration. Security penetration testing by independent auditors. Sovereign AI model deployment — language models, document processing, and classification systems. Secure email and classified document management system rollout. First inter-governmental secure communications established in Month 15.

Phase 4: Full Operations

Months 19-24

Complete government data migration from foreign cloud providers to sovereign infrastructure. All five nations operational on the mesh network. Full workload migration — tax processing, census data management, military communications, diplomatic correspondence. Performance validation and optimization. Independent security audit confirming zero-knowledge architecture integrity. Knowledge transfer and operational handover to technical teams. Ongoing support contract activated with 99.99% uptime SLA.

04 / Metrics

Before After

MetricBeforeAfterImprovement
Government Data on Sovereign Infrastructure6%100%Improved
Inter-Capital Communication Latency47ms (commercial)<8ms (mesh)Improved
Annual Foreign Cloud Spend$340M$0Improved
Encrypted Government Communications0 channels2,400 channelsImproved
Local Data Center Workforce0 engineers240 engineersImproved
Data Center UptimeN/A (foreign)99.997%Improved
Sovereign AI Model AccuracyN/A94.3%Improved
Annual CO2 from Data Operations28,000t (foreign)0t (renewable)Improved
“For decades, our most sensitive government data — tax records, military communications, diplomatic cables — was processed on servers we did not own, in jurisdictions we did not control, subject to laws we did not write. We were sovereign in theory but dependent in practice. Harch Corp changed that. Today, every byte of government data is processed, stored, and transmitted on infrastructure that we control, under laws that we enact, operated by engineers we trained. The latency between Dakar and Ouagadougou is now faster than between Paris and London. Zero security breaches in fourteen months of operation. This is what digital sovereignty looks like.”
G

General Oumar Diallo

Director of Digital Infrastructure, Regional Economic Community

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