Mauritius
AI Registry.
Govern, orchestrate, and monitor trusted AI agents, models, and MCP infrastructure from a unified sovereign platform - built for Mauritius' digital sovereignty, its regulators, public institutions, and the enterprises driving national innovation.
Discover what Mauritius can trust and integrate.
The registry points to locally-relevant AI resources - never hosts them. Each listing carries a verifiable provider, a sovereignty review, and a stable AIR-ID under air://.
Three resource types. Composable by AI.
The registry covers three kinds of sovereign AI resource - models, agents and skills. Each has its own listing template and stable AIR-ID, so consumers and AI systems can find and combine them programmatically.
The sovereignty test.
Only resources that meet a sovereignty test are listed past basic discovery. The test asks whether the resource encodes local law, local data, local systems, or local language and culture.
How it works
A submission must cite at least one sovereignty basis and provide concrete evidence: a referenced law, dataset, institution, language asset or cultural artefact. Reviewers apply a published checklist before elevating a resource's status.
Local law
Encodes local legislation, regulation, official process or professional obligation.
Local data
Uses local datasets, records or locally collected knowledge.
Local systems
Integrates with or describes local institutional systems and workflows.
Local language & culture
Supports local language, culture, norms or context.
From submission to use. Six transparent steps.
Submit
Provider submits the resource with metadata and sovereignty evidence.
Review
Reviewer applies the sovereignty rubric and records reviewer notes.
Publish
Operator publishes the listing and issues the stable AIR-ID.
Discover
Consumer finds the resource through the portal or discovery API.
Use
Consumer calls the provider directly - runtime never touches the registry.
Maintain
Provider keeps metadata accurate; status reflects any changes over time.