At the recent US-Nigeria Startup Investment Summit, a candid conversation unfolded between Emeka Ajene, startup operator and investor, and Dr. Omobola Johnson, senior partner at TLcom Capital and former Minister of Communications Technology. The discussion zeroed in on one of the most talked-about startup stories in Nigeria’s tech ecosystem; the shutdown of Okra, the open banking fintech taking a deeper look on a question that we have covered in an earlier article: Where Is Okra’s Sixteen Million Dollar Raise, and How Can Founders Pay Themselves Legally After Closing a Round?

Emeka Ajene: “What Happened to the $16 Million?”
Opening the conversation, Emeka referenced the partially closed logistics startup Kobo, but quickly shifted attention to what he called the “new story”: Okra. “I think there’s still that perception: what did these guys do with the $16 million? If I had a fraction of that…”It’s a sentiment shared widely across the tech community. In a space where capital is scarce and outcomes are high-stakes, the fall of a well-funded company like Okra has triggered waves of speculation, concern, and reflection.
Dr. Omobola Johnson: “We Didn’t Burn the Money, We Gave Some Back”
Dr. Johnson offered a rare insider perspective on what actually happened behind the scenes. “Okra was a little different from Kobo,” she began. “We actually decided with the founder to wind the company down and return some of the capital back to the investors, because they didn’t spend all of that $16 million.”This point challenges a prevailing narrative in African tech: that startups often mismanage or burn through capital without clear outcomes. In Okra’s case, it wasn’t reckless spending that caused the shutdown but rather systemic challenges rooted in regulatory dynamics.
The Role of Regulation: “They Pulled the Rug”
According to Johnson, Okra operated in one of the most difficult sectors for early-stage innovation: open banking. This was an area that lacked clear regulatory frameworks when the company launched.“Regulation came much later,” she explained. “Halfway down the line, the government decided they were going to do what Okra was doing; and they did, at a fraction of the cost. They just pulled the rug from under their feet.”Johnson emphasized that this wasn’t about making excuses. “Some of these companies fail; and it did. The story is out there. But the point to make is that these are high-risk investments.”
The Double Bind of Innovating in Regulated Sectors
Johnson pointed to a broader problem plaguing the African startup scene; the risk of entering highly regulated industries without adequate policy support. She noted that even major players like Flutterwave and Moniepoint have faced regulatory headwinds.“They’re big enough now that the regulator pays attention and listens to them,” she said. “But the ones that are smaller and innovating? They’re under the radar. It can be very, very difficult.”
What This Means for African Innovation
The Okra story, while unfortunate, raises important questions about how African governments engage with tech innovation. Johnson stressed the need for proactive regulatory frameworks that support rather than stifle new ideas.“There’s a role for the government here,” she concluded. “This is something governments need to be aware of. You can’t promote innovation and then compete with the innovators.”
Final Thoughts
The shutdown of Okra is a cautionary tale about startup risk and also a window into the systemic friction between African innovation and regulatory inertia. The conversation between Ajene and Johnson was a rare moment of transparency in a space often driven by hype and success stories and perhaps that’s what makes the Okra story so vital; not as a failure, but as a lesson in what it takes to build and sustain innovation on the continent. Okra’s final chapter is defined by an IP sale, investor refunds, and a carefully executed exit strategy that is rarely seen in African tech.











