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What happens when geopolitics gets in the way of doing business? China just answered that question with a single line.
Chinaโs National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) on Monday gave the coldest response to the Meta and Manus deal announced in December.
Meta was set to acquire Manus, a Chinese-founded โhands-on AIโ workspace that helps businesses generate and manage things like slides, websites, apps, and research, for $2 billion, but that now looks to be off after the NDRC gave a one-line notice that it has decided to prohibit foreign investment in the startup in accordance with laws and regulations.
If you think this has to do with last yearโs TikTok saga, youโre not wrong. If you also think this signals deeper geopolitical tensions between the two countries, youโre also not wrong.
But for Meta, which planned to acquire Manus to build AI agents that can deeply research and perform analysis with minimal human prompting, it will either have to look elsewhere or lock in with its many tech bro hires and just develop the thing in-house.
In more news, Zikoko Citizenโs report contains interesting nuggets on elections in Nigeria and how the country is set to vote in another general election next year. If youโd like to know more, download the report.
Letโs dive in.
Elon Musk meme. Image Source: Google
Bought your Starlink kit abroad to save some cash, only to find it suddenly stopped working at home? That workaround just hit a wall in the Central African Republic (CAR).
Authorities have suspended the use of Starlink kits operating in โroamingโ modeโdevices bought in other countries and used locally without going through national approval. The government says these kits fall outside its regulatory framework and raise concerns around security, traceability, and compliance.
If you suspect a similar pattern has played out in Africa, youโre not wrong. The same happened in South Africa, where enforcement actions from regulators forced Starlink to halt roaming.
For CAR, the timing is awkward but telling. Starlink only launched commercially in the country in March 2026, stepping into a market where Internet penetration stands at 15.5%. For many, importing cheaper kits or activating roaming was the fastest way online.
The government is not rejecting Starlink. It is tightening control over how it is used. All telecom equipment must now be approved locally, and roaming kits have not met those requirements.
Between the lines: This is about visibility. Authorities want to know who is connected, from where, and through which devices. Roaming kits, by design, blur those lines.
What is really happening? A familiar pattern is playing out. New tech arrives, users find shortcuts around cost and access barriers, and regulators step in to draw firmer boundaries.
There is also a pricing reality. A standard Starlink kit costs CFA240,000 ($400), with a monthly subscription of CFA33,000 ($59), before taxes. For many users, sourcing hardware from cheaper markets was not just clever, it was necessary.
However, CAR is now closing off the easy access routes, and users either have to legally buy a Starlink kit or forgo fast satellite Internet speed.
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The headquarters of Finnish telecom equipment group Nokia in Espoo pictured on January 29, 2015. Image Source: Roni Rekomaa/AFP/Getty Images
Remember Nokia? The mobile phone manufacturer turned telecom infrastructure operator is expanding its operations and deepening its footprint in North America, India, and emerging markets across Africa.
It has selected Egypt as its regional support hub, establishing a centralised operations centre to manage customer networks and services across the Middle East and Africa. The facility will support all its business lines, including mobile and network infrastructure and global services, as operators deal with rising data traffic and increasingly complex systems.
Telecom networks are getting harder to run. More users, more devices, and the shift to cloud-based systems mean operators need faster response times and round-the-clock support. Centralising those functions in one location helps cut delays and standardise how issues are handled.
Egypt fits into Nokiaโs long-term plan. Its location allows coverage across multiple time zones, while a deep pool of engineers and established telecom infrastructure make it easier to scale operations without starting from scratch.
The move builds on a 2024 agreement with the Information Technology Industry Development Agency (ITIDA), a government agency focused on talent development, and Telecom Egypt, pointing to a longer-term effort to anchor more high-value tech work in the country.
The timing also lines up with a broader shift. On April 22, Alshaya Group, the Kuwait-based retail franchise operator of brands like Starbucks and H&M, opened a global talent centre in Cairo, Egypt, to run technology and customer operations across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), adding to a growing list of companies routing regional functions through Egypt, including Huawei, Microsoft, and Oracle.
Digital services exports to Egypt brought in $7.4 billion in 2025, and hubs like this are part of the plan to grow that figure by moving further into network operations and engineering work tied to global demand.
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Airtel Money MD Anne Kinuthia-Otieno and Absa Bank Kenya Business Banking Director Renato DโSouza, during the signing of a partnership enabling direct transfers from Airtel Money wallets into Absa Bankโs accounts and payments to merchant paybill accounts. Image: Absa Bank Kenya
Kenyaโs mobile money wars are heating up again, and Airtel Money has partnered with Absa Bank Kenya, the countryโs fifth-biggest bank, to let businesses move money directly between mobile wallets and bank accounts.
How it would work: This integration would connect Airtel Money wallets directly to Absa bank accounts. Instead of a merchant receiving money in their wallet and then manually transferring it to a bank account, the funds can settle directly into their bank. That means fewer steps and faster access to cash.
A new move in Airtel Moneyโs strategy: In Kenya, M-PESA dominates the mobile money ecosystem, holding an 89% market share. Its scale is massive, and its partnerships with other Kenyan banks like NCBA and KCB Group, through products like M-Shwari and KCB M-PESA, have embedded it into how businesses save and transact.
However, Airtel Money has been chipping away at M-PESAโs dominance in recent times as its market share crossed the 10% mark in 2025. That growth could be attributed to sustained pricing and cashback campaigns run by Airtel. The new partnership is another route the mobile money player is taking to chip at its dominance.
Why this matters: Mobile money in Kenya is huge. Transaction value through mobile money agents totalled KES 633.35 billion ($4.9 billion) in February 2026. By reducing friction between wallets and bank accounts, Airtel is making a play for relevance in everyday business operations, and for banks like Absa, staying plugged into mobile money means access to its massive market.
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Image Source: Moov Africa
Moov Africa Benin, the countryโs third largest telecom operator, has launched 5G services, to compete with rivals, MTN and Celtiis, both of whom have already been pushing aggressively into high-speed data and expanding their Internet offerings. Moov said it had rolled out over 230 5G sites across key cities like Cotonou, Porto-Novo, and Parakou, with plans to expand further.
An attempt to win back former glory: Not long ago, Moov was comfortably the second largest player in Beninโs mobile Internet market, trailing behind MTN until Celtiis entered the market in 2024. Last year, Celtiis overtook Moov to become the second-largest operator in the market; Moovโs subscriber base had slipped to about 2.59 million, while Celtiis surged ahead to 3.51 million, locking in second place. MTN remained firmly in the lead at 4.51 million.
Why 5G and why now: MTN has leaned into premium, high-speed offerings, while Celtiis has gained ground with competitive pricing and aggressive market entry. The Internet segment has also expanded with the entry of players such as Starlink and CanalBox in 2023 and 2025, respectively. Moovโs 5G push looks like a response to match the speed and give users a reason to reconsider it.
Cool, but will this 5G be adopted? 5G sounds impressive, but adoption depends on more than network rollout. Weโve seen a similar pattern elsewhere. In Nigeria, for example, 5G launched with plenty of hype, but adoption has been stuck below 3%. Beninโs online penetration sits a little above 32%, meaning most of the population isnโt even online yet, let alone upgrade to 5G. Yes, 5G is here, but how many people will see enough value to switch?
Source:
|
Coin Name |
Current Value |
Day |
Month |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin | $76,915 |
โ 2.52% |
+ 15.30% |
| Ether | $2,290 |
โ 3.86% |
+ 14.25% |
| Perle | $0.3406 |
+ 49.68% |
+ 86.47% |
| Solana | $84.08 |
โ 3.90% |
+ 1.64% |
* Data as of 05.45 AM WAT, April 28, 2026.
Written by: Emmanuel Nwosu and Opeyemi Kareem
Edited by: Emmanuel Nwosu and Ganiu Oloruntade
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