$16.5M Raised, Startup Shut Down, Founder Moves to UK: Okra’s Fara Jituboh Starts Over at Kernel

In a twist few anticipated, Nigerian fintech pioneer Okra has shut down operations after raising over $16.5 million in funding, and its co-founder, Fara Ashiru Jituboh, has quietly transitioned to a new role as Head of Engineering at British startup Kernel.

Founded in 2019 to power Africa’s open finance movement, Okra’s closure signals a pivotal moment for the continent’s fintech infrastructure bets and raises urgent questions about startup sustainability, local cloud economics, and the cost of innovation in fragile markets.

From API Pioneer to Cloud Gambit

Okra launched with a bold ambition: to create secure, reliable APIs that allowed developers to connect user bank accounts to third-party apps. The company quickly became synonymous with open banking in Africa, working with major platforms such as Renmoney, Bamboo, AIICO Insurance, and Branch. By early 2020, Okra’s API usage had jumped by 175%, helping position it as a technical backbone for the next wave of African fintech.

Between 2020 and 2021, Okra raised a total of $16.5 million, with investment from TLcom Capital, Susa Ventures, Accenture Ventures, and others. But funding wasn’t the only currency being burned. According to Jituboh, cloud infrastructure costs, especially from foreign providers like AWS and Azure were swallowing most of the startup’s revenue, just behind salaries.

In a calculated pivot, Okra launched Nebula, a naira-denominated cloud infrastructure platform, in October 2024. The idea: reduce FX exposure, offer localised pricing, and compete with global cloud giants. Yet by May 2025, the company was winding down.

Why Okra Shut Down

Jituboh confirmed the company’s closure:

The company made the decision to wind down in May. We built impactful technology, worked with some of the biggest brands across the continent, and helped pioneer open banking in Africa. I’m proud of what we accomplished.

Industry analysts suggest that while Nebula was conceptually sound, execution came too late to rescue Okra’s burn rate. Cloud computing remains one of the most capital-intensive bets in the African startup space, particularly in markets where regulation, bandwidth, and trust lag behind.

Jituboh’s departure follows that of co-founder David Peterside, who left in 2022. Okra has not announced a successor or formal leadership transition, and sources indicate that the team has since disbanded.

A Bigger Shift: Talent and Tech Migration

Jituboh’s move to Kernel, a UK-based startup working on next-gen developer infrastructure, mirrors a growing pattern: African tech talent and founders increasingly relocating to Europe, North America, and the Middle East, not just for stability but to stay in proximity to capital, infrastructure, and scaled markets.

Her new role as Head of Engineering speaks to her deep technical credentials. Before founding Okra, Jituboh held engineering roles at BMW, Canva, and JPMorgan, and was regarded as one of the most technically fluent founders on the continent. Her decision to return to the builder’s chair suggests a recalibration, one informed by the lessons of building under pressure in Africa’s volatile economic environment.

The Legacy of Okra

Okra didn’t just build APIs, it catalysed a movement. It forced banks to modernise, inspired a generation of fintech builders, and proved that local infrastructure could be globally ambitious. While its pivot to cloud may not have paid off, its boldness laid the groundwork for deeper conversations about Africa’s infrastructure sovereignty and startup capital efficiency.

More importantly, it expanded what was imaginable for young African technologists especially women who now have a blueprint not just for success, but for starting over with dignity, clarity, and purpose.

This article was rewritten with the aid of AI
At Techsoma, we embrace AI and understand our role in providing context, driving narrative and changing culture.

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