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Today in Francophone Weekly, weâll look at how marketplaces across Francophone Africa are evolving, from the revenue models that are actually working to the infrastructure constraints behind them.
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Letâs dive in.
Image Source: Tenor
Diamond Trust Bank (DTB) Kenya, a midâtier Kenyan lender with a multiâcountry footprint in East Africa, has decided that Burundi is now someone elseâs problem. It has completed the sale of its entire 83.67% stake in DTB Burundi to a consortium of mostly local investors, first reported in September 2025. This marks the end of a 16âyear presence that began in 2009 with a greenfield entry backed by the International Finance Corporation (IFC), a development finance institution, and Burundian partners.
The economics had turned hostile. By 2024, DTB Burundi was contributing only KES 50.6 million ($388,000) in profit before tax, down 56% from the prior year, while its assets shrank to KES 4.6 billion ($35.2 million). While the countryâs inflation has been easing in recent months, persistent FX shortages and fuel scarcity created operational barriers for DTB Burundi, leading to thin lending margins, unstable deposits, and mounting strain on a relatively small balance sheet.
Over time, DTB had built up a recorded investment of about KES 636.9 million ($4.9 million) in the subsidiary, including a 2018 buyout of IFC, but the eventual sale to a local investor consortium resulted in a KES 533 million ($4 million) loss from discontinued operations, confirming that the group recovered only a fraction of its outlay.
Between the lines: The logic of the exit becomes clearer when you zoom out to the group. DTBâs core Kenyan business generated KES 10.7 billion ($82 million) in net profit after tax in 2025, up from KES 8.8 billion ($67.5 million) in 2024, and is complemented by larger operations in Uganda and Tanzania, where scale and earnings potential are significantly higher than in Burundi.
Dropping a subscale, lowâreturn subsidiary that soaks up regulatory capital and management attention allows the group to recycle resources into markets where every extra shilling of equity can earn more. DTBâs move highlights that regional banking subsidiaries still have to earn their keep. While there is a broader trend of African banks eyeing regional expansion, it is not hard to foresee a future where they become expendable if they remain unprofitable.
For DTB Burundi, questions hang over which employeesâabout 51 of them working across four branchesâwill stay or leave, and which brand assets the new owners will retain under the new regime.
Fincra has secured a PSP licence in Canada, adding a regulated connection between Africa and one of the worldâs most trusted financial systems. See what this means for your business.
âElon Musk spiralling.â Image Source: Digibyte Memes
On March 23, Namibiaâs telecoms regulator, the Communications Regulatory Authority of Namibia (CRAN), rejected Starlinkâs licence application. The regulator said Starlink failed three of its six requirements for radio spectrum licencing; it is also seeking 51% ownership stake in the local subsidiary.
Starlink, the satellite Internet company operating in 26 African countries, responding to the licence denial, has said that the rejection does not reflect the full picture and emphasised the regulatory and operational challenges it faces in Namibia. The Internet company launched a public all-out, urging Namibians to push for a review of what it described as a âmisleadingâ call. The Elon Musk-owned company said it received 98.6% public support during the consultation process.
What Starlink says went wrong: In a statement released on its website, Starlink disputed the regulatorâs description of nonâcompliance, calling it misleading. The company says that over the past three years, it has made clear its intention to establish a local entity, comply with national security requirements, and pay all applicable taxes and fees, in line with how it operates in other markets. When Namibia cited nonâcompliance as the basis for rejection, Starlink pushed back, arguing that the decision does not reflect its stated commitments.
Yet, the precedents do not help Starlinkâs case. In South Africa, where authorities also demanded local ownership, Starlinkâs entry has stalled; in Lesotho, a similar push for local equity ended with the government backing down in 2025 under pressure linked to a US trade deal and thousands of jobs at stake.
In that context, it is hard to take Starlinkâs framing at face value. After saying it âmade clear its commitmentâ to establish a local entity, the satellite Internet company goes on in the same statement to stress that it âhas global shareholding restrictions and cannot accept local ownership.â Those two points sit uneasily together: you cannot meaningfully âestablish a local entityâ on the regulatorâs terms if you categorically refuse local equity.
Starlink then leans on a political argument. It notes that âwhile Namibiaâs framework encourages local shareholding, it allows for exemptions at the Ministerâs discretion. In this case, an exemption was not granted,â signalling that its strategy now hinges less on meeting Namibia halfway and more on persuading the minister to carve out a special deal. It looks like a familiar playbook: reject ownership rules as a matter of global policy, then turn to public opinion and political pressure to force an exemption. It is obvious that the satellite Internet company plans to lobby hard for a Namibian licence, and it is already trying to enlist citizensâ help to get there.
While there is a broader debate over whether African regulators should insist on local ownership from foreign operators at all, Namibiaâs position is at least internally consistent: the rules are clear, exemptions are discretionary, and Starlink is asking for a carveâout it has not earned.
What Starlink is asking for now: Namibiaâs regulatory framework allows the regulator to revisit its decision within 90 days, either on its own accord or if an affected party pushes for it through an appeal. Starlink is encouraging that second route by asking Namibians to request an appeal directly from the regulator.
Image Source: Tenor
Standard Bank, Africaâs largest bank by assets, is now also its biggest payments engine. In 2025, the group processed R164 trillion ($9.5 trillion) in payment flows across 2.3 billion transactions, a 9% jump from 2024 that reflects heavier use of electronic channels, instant payments, and merchant acquiring across its African markets.
State of play: Standard Bank has built out cross-border rails that now run through Chinaâs CIPS system, allowing African clients to move money directly into the AfricaâAsia corridor, and through Aroko, its blockchain-enabled settlement rail that has already handled more than R1 trillion ($58.2 billion) in flows. It has also started backing rand-denominated stablecoin and tokenised deposit experiments, signalling that it wants more of those flows to move on infrastructure it can control.
Between the lines: At the scale of payments processed, Standard Bank moved more money across its channels than mobile money platforms, including MTN MoMo, with R164 trillion ($9.5 trillion) in flows versus about $2 trillion for the entire global mobile money ecosystem in 2025. That makes Standard Bankâs R164 trillion ($9.5 trillion) one of the few visible benchmarks for bank-run payment rails in Africa and, on disclosed numbers, puts its payments engine in a different class from mobile money platforms and possibly rival banks.
Whoever controls those underlying rails has outsized influence on the cost, speed, and direction of money moving around African economies, and Standard Bank is signalling that, for now, it intends to be that control point.
ROn Burgundy âThat escalated quicklyâ meme. Image Source: Tenor
Kenyaâs media regulator is stressâtesting the countryâs broadcast industry, and the results could decide who gets to stay on air. The Communications Authority of Kenya (CAK), the countryâs telecoms regulator that also allocates and polices broadcast spectrum, has won a key round against Standard Group, one of the countryâs largest media houses, after Kenyaâs Multimedia Appeals Tribunal cleared the way for the regulator to revoke six of its licences over KES 48.87 million ($375,000) in unpaid regulatory fees.
State of play: Standard says those arrears exist because another arm of the state, the government advertising machine, owes it more than KES 1.2 billion ($9.2 million), turning what should be a straightforward compliance issue into a circular fight inside the same house.
Standard Groupâs issue is not an isolated skirmish. In 2025, the regulator cancelled 75 broadcastârelated licences across TV, radio, and signal distribution, mostly for nonâcompliance, signalling a much harder line in a sector long used to gentle reminders and grace periods. The formal position, now backed by the tribunal, is simple: using public spectrum is a privilege that comes with statutory obligations, and those obligations do not pause because your business model is cracking under fragmented ad revenue, audience drift to digital, and worsening liquidity. Licence fees and levies sit in one box; your cashâflow drama sits in another.
Between the lines: The problem is that these boxes keep bleeding into each other. The same authority that is ramping up licence revocations has also ventured into editorial territory, ordering broadcasters in June 2025 to stop live coverage of antiâgovernment protests, a move media houses saw as a dress rehearsal for content control during tense political moments for the upcoming 2027 elections.
Standard now says it will escalate its licence battle to the High Court, triggering an automatic stay of revocation and forcing judges to revisit a familiar question from Kenyaâs digitalâmigration era: how far can a technical regulator go before it starts regulating speech itself? However the courts answer that question, the outcome will not just decide one companyâs fate; it will set the tone for how much pressure financially stressed newsrooms can bear before enforcing order turns into thinning out the voices on air.
Source:
|
Coin Name |
Current Value |
Day |
Month |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin | $67,447 |
â 0.28% |
+ 0.19% |
| Ether | $2,060 |
+ 0.18% |
+ 1.94% |
| Sky | $0.07423 |
+ 1.3% |
+ 6.95% |
| Solana | $83.19 |
â 0.79% |
â 5.28% |
* Data as of 06.10 AM WAT, March 31, 2026.
Written by: Emmanuel Nwosu and Opeyemi Kareem
Edited by: Emmanuel Nwosu
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