Inspire Africa Group, one of Uganda’s fastest-rising coffee enterprises, is joining forces with ARAPAPA by Santa Anzo, the country’s leading fashion house, for a cultural showcase at this year’s Ugandan North American Association (UNAA) Convention in New Orleans.
The partnership — announced Aug. 28 — will headline the 37th annual convention under the theme “Brewed in Uganda, Styled for the World.” It pairs two of Uganda’s most recognizable exports: coffee and fashion.

For Inspire Africa, the collaboration is part of a broader strategy to grow Uganda’s coffee revenues from roughly $2 billion to $5 billion over the next five years. The company says it is betting on culture, celebrity influence and tourism to market Ugandan coffee as more than just a commodity.
“Just as Gulf countries have successfully used sports diplomacy to rebrand themselves as global destinations, Inspire Africa believes fashion diplomacy can be the new tool for Uganda,” the group said in a statement. “Using coffee and couture, we can market the country as a hub for both coffee excellence and creativity.”
Globally, the coffee industry is valued at about $460 billion. Africa, however, earns just $2.5 billion — mostly from unprocessed beans. A kilogram of raw green coffee sells for about $2.50, while processed, branded coffee can retail for up to $40. Inspire Africa argues that shifting toward value-added exports and weaving them into tourism could dramatically boost Uganda’s earnings and draw more visitors. The company has set its sights on raising annual arrivals from about 700,000 today to 6 million.
The deal, formalized in a memorandum of understanding, will see Inspire Africa back the ARAPAPA Fashion Showcase at the convention. Ugandan designer Santa Anzo, who has been a force in African fashion for over two decades, will curate a limited-edition collection inspired by coffee — from earthy tones to textured fabrics.
“This collaboration is about identity, heritage, and global pride,” Anzo said. Her ARAPAPA label has previously been featured on international runways and has long positioned Ugandan fashion as both creative and globally relevant.

The coffee-fashion partnership extends beyond the New Orleans event. Inspire Africa is also developing the Africa Coffee Park in Ntungamo District, southwestern Uganda — a 150-acre complex that will house the country’s largest coffee processing facility, a convention center, sports arena and a coffee academy.
Organizers of the UNAA convention, which runs Aug. 29 through Sept. 1, expect thousands of Ugandans in the diaspora and international guests. For Inspire Africa and ARAPAPA, the showcase is meant to be the start of a longer campaign that links coffee, couture and tourism as a unified story of Uganda’s global identity.