Mbabane – The Ministry of Information, Communication and Technology hosted Dr Jean Paul Muka from Presight, a company under the G42 group, in Mbabane for a high-level engagement aimed at advancing the Kingdom’s digital transformation agenda.
The Royal Eswatini Police Service attended the session, which focused on practical applications of artificial intelligence and advanced data analytics in strengthening public service delivery and national security.
Presight is a global leader in artificial intelligence and big data analytics, specialising in large-scale data integration, AI-driven decision intelligence, and high-performance computing solutions. The company works with governments and enterprises to harness data for real-time insights, predictive capabilities, and improved operational efficiency.

The discussions covered several areas where the Royal Eswatini Police Service could benefit from adopting these technologies. These include proactive crime prevention through predictive analytics, which would enable law enforcement to anticipate crime hotspots and deploy resources strategically, shifting from reactive to intelligence-led policing.
The engagement also covered real-time threat detection and situational awareness through the integration of CCTV, sensors, and multiple data sources to provide immediate alerts on emerging security risks. Advanced digital forensics tools were discussed as a way to automate the analysis of digital evidence and significantly reduce case resolution times.
Other areas included unified data integration, which would connect existing systems into a single AI-powered platform to improve command-level decision-making, as well as resource optimisation through predictive modelling to improve effectiveness while reducing operational costs. Capacity building and knowledge transfer to strengthen internal capabilities within the Royal Eswatini Police Service for long-term digital transformation were also on the table.
Presight already delivers these solutions to institutions such as the Abu Dhabi Police and the Maldives Police Service, where measurable results have been recorded.
