As President Cyril Ramaphosa prepares to meet former U.S. President Donald Trump to discuss trade relations and sensitive topics such as the controversial narrative around “white genocide,” there’s a far more pressing and forward-looking issue that deserves equal attention on the agenda: the stifling grip of Big Tech on African innovation.

While geopolitical discourse may dominate headlines, the quiet war on African digital sovereignty is being waged in boardrooms and courtrooms. One such example is the ongoing legal standoff between South Africa’s GovChat—a citizen engagement platform endorsed and supported by the South African government—and the American tech giant, Meta Platforms Inc. (formerly Facebook).

GovChat, created to connect citizens directly with government services, represents precisely the kind of innovation Africa needs: homegrown, socially driven, and scaled for impact. Yet it finds itself locked in a David vs. Goliath battle, over the fundamental right to exist on a platform that billions rely on for communication. Meta’s attempt to unilaterally offboard GovChat from its WhatsApp Business API is not just a legal squabble—it is an alarming act of economic censorship and digital exclusion.

This case highlights a deeper, systemic issue: African tech startups, no matter how impactful or locally relevant, remain vulnerable to the whims of global tech monopolies. These platforms can unilaterally shut down services, restrict access to APIs, and, in doing so, suffocate innovation across the continent. This is not merely about corporate policy—it’s about digital colonialism.

President Ramaphosa has long championed the promise of the Fourth Industrial Revolution in Africa. He now has an opportunity to globalize that leadership. His upcoming meeting with President Trump is a crucial platform to advocate not just for trade, but for fairness, digital rights, and innovation sovereignty. The GovChat-Meta battle must be raised as a key example of how international Big Tech policies, left unchecked, can stifle emerging-market growth and undermine national digital strategies.

Let this meeting be more than a political engagement—it must be a stand for innovation justice. Africa does not seek charity from Big Tech. It demands respect, reciprocity, and a fair digital playing field.

If the United States values democratic engagement and the free market, then it must also value and protect the digital enterprises rising from the Global South. President Ramaphosa must make it clear: the future of African innovation cannot be dictated by Silicon Valley’s terms alone.

  • Prof Eldrid Jordaan is GovChat Founder and Professor of Practice at Johannesburg Business School

 

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