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Namibia’s communication regulator dismisses Starlink appeal over license rejection

By Thomson Reuters Jun 22, 2026 | 10:15 AM

WINDHOEK, June 22 – Namibia’s communications regulator said on Monday it dismissed an appeal by Starlink against the ​rejection of its license applications, ‌reaffirming that Elon Musk’s satellite internet provider failed to meet local ownership requirements.

• The Communications Regulatory Authority of Namibia (CRAN) rejected Starlink’s applications ‌for ​a telecommunications service license ⁠and radio spectrum ⁠access in March, citing non-compliance with ownership and control requirements under the country’s Communications Act.

• “Starlink’s application remained non-compliant with ​the ownership and control requirements under section 46 of the Communications Act, ⁠No. 8, 2009,” said ⁠CRAN in a statement.

• The ​regulator added that Starlink’s reconsideration application was ​filed after the statutory deadline, which ‌expired on April 23.

• CRAN received 624 reconsideration requests from the public, 622 of which were dismissed for failing ⁠to meet procedural and jurisdictional requirements.

• The two submissions that met the threshold introduced no ⁠new facts ‌and identified no material error ⁠in the original decision, the ​regulator ‌said.

• “CRAN affirms that the reconsideration ​of requests ⁠did not provide a sufficient legal or factual basis to alter the original decision,” it added.

(Reporting by Nyasha Nyaungwa;Witing by Sfundo Parakozov;Editing by Alexander Winning and ​Bill Berkrot)