Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni meets Starlink to discuss entry to East African nation

A unit of SpaceX, the satellite internet company, is rapidly expanding its services on the African continent and is already live in more than a dozen countries. It was granted licences by Somalia and Lesotho earlier this month.
Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni said on Tuesday that he had a "productive meeting" with the representatives of tech billionaire Elon Musk's Starlink, which is looking to establish a presence in the East African country.
A unit of SpaceX, the satellite internet company, is rapidly expanding its services on the African continent and is already live in more than a dozen countries. It was granted licences by Somalia and Lesotho earlier this month.
More To Read
- SpaceX’s Starship completes first successful test after previous launch failures
- Kenya to benefit from EU’s Sh2.3 billion internet expansion project
- Over 9,000 new pest species threaten Uganda’s food security, study warns
- Uganda confirms deal to accept migrants deported from US
- 177 Ugandans pick nomination forms in bid to unseat Yoweri Museveni
- Uganda agrees to take migrants under US deportation deal
"I appreciate their commitment to providing low-cost internet in hard-to-reach areas and establishing a presence in Uganda. They are welcome," Museveni said on X.
Ugandan consumers have long complained about the high cost and unreliability of domestic internet services, which some blame on the lack of sufficient competition in the market.
It was unclear if Starlink had already formally applied for a license to operate in Uganda. A spokesperson for the sector regulator, Uganda Communications Commission (UCC), did not respond to a Reuters request for a comment.
A unit of South African telecom giant MTN Group is the dominant player in the East African country's data market and chiefly competes with a unit of India's Bharti Airtel.
Top Stories Today