Aptos Foundation, HashKey MENA, and Pan-African infrastructure provider Daya launched a pilot program on June 4 to build a regulated B2B stablecoin payment corridor connecting the MENA region with Africa, with settlement happening natively on the Aptos Layer 1 blockchain.
How the corridor actually works
HashKey MENA, which operates under the regulatory oversight of Dubai’s Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (VARA), anchors the Middle Eastern side of the corridor. On the African end, Daya provides the infrastructure that makes blockchain settlement practical for real-world commerce. Its platform supports fiat on-ramps and off-ramps, including virtual Naira accounts for Nigerian businesses.
The pilot allows corporations to test compliant settlement solutions. The architecture is designed to address high costs, slow processing times, and chronic liquidity shortfalls.
Why this corridor, why now













