Audio By Carbonatix
South Africa on Friday rejected a claim by multibillionaire Elon Musk that his Starlink satellite company could not operate in the country because he is not Black, and its telecoms regulator said Starlink had not applied for a licence.
In his latest rebuke of the country where he was born and went to school, Musk wrote on X, which he also owns: "Starlink is not allowed to operate in South Africa, because I'm not black".
Clayson Monyela, a senior official at the foreign affairs department, responded emphatically on the social media platform.
"Sir, that's NOT true & you know it! It's got nothing to do with your skin colour. Starlink is welcome to operate in South Africa provided there's compliance with local laws," Monyela wrote.
"This is a global international trade & investment principle."
Musk appeared to be taking a swipe at local Black Economic Empowerment rules that foreign-owned telecommunications licensees sell 30% of the equity in their local subsidiaries to historically disadvantaged groups.
South African technology news website TechCentral has reported that Starlink's parent company SpaceX wrote to telecommunications regulator ICASA telling it that it should rethink the 30% ownership requirement for licensees.
An ICASA spokesperson said without elaborating: "ICASA has not received any application from Starlink or SpaceX."
Communications minister Solly Malatsi did not answer a phone call seeking comment.
TechCentral has reported that Malatsi has asked ICASA to consider "equity equivalents" like skills development to allow companies like SpaceX to operate locally.
Starlink operates in many African countries, but in addition to South Africa it has faced obstacles in places like Cameroon and Namibia due to licensing disputes.
Musk attended school in the South African capital Pretoria before emigrating to the United States, where he is now a top adviser to U.S. President Donald Trump as well as the world's richest person.
Within weeks of taking office, Trump has suspended U.S. aid to South Africa over its land reform policies and its genocide case against Washington's ally Israel at the World Court.
Latest Stories
-
Beyond Competence: How capacity shapes professional access and influence
10 minutes -
Chamber of Mines calls on BoG to release full breakdown of mining export proceeds
19 minutes -
We appeal to Ghanaians for patience as we replace more transformers – Energy Minister
35 minutes -
Power stability has improved since 2025 compared to 2024 – Jinapor
42 minutes -
Akosombo substation fire should never have happened – Ben Boakye
46 minutes -
Savannah region: Yazori Chief issues election boycott threat over underdevelopment concerns
51 minutes -
Backbone of economy in pain – Minority warns of collapse in worker morale
55 minutes -
Ghana Jazz Orchestra clocks in on International Jazz Day
1 hour -
M-CARE’s first steering committee meeting targets chronic and mental health care integration in Ghana
1 hour -
Bank of Ghana in 2025: Financially impaired but operationally resilient
1 hour -
Fixing Akosombo does not end dumsor; energy crisis predates incident — Miracles Aboagye
1 hour -
NAIMOS dawn operation leads to arrest of 49 suspected illegal miners after ambush on taskforce in Ahanta West
1 hour -
Energy sector woes stem from political interference, not leadership failure — Kofi Bentil
2 hours -
Communication around power outages has been ‘insincere’— Kofi Bentil
2 hours -
President Mahama breaks ground for modern 24-hour market in Asesewa
3 hours