The Mercury News

Africa internet plundered by Chinese broker

Businessma­n based in Hong Kong owns 5% of the continent’s sites

- By Alan Suderman, Frank Bajak and Rodney Muhumuza

Outsiders have long profited from Africa’s riches of gold, diamonds, and even people. Digital resources have proven no different.

Millions of internet addresses assigned to Africa have been waylaid, some fraudulent­ly, including through insider machinatio­ns linked to a former top employee of the nonprofit that assigns the continent’s addresses. Instead of serving Africa’s internet developmen­t, many have benefited spammers and scammers, while others satiate Chinese appetites for pornograph­y and gambling.

New leadership at the nonprofit, AFRINIC, is working to reclaim the lost addresses. But a legal challenge by a deep-pocketed Chinese businessma­n is threatenin­g the body’s very existence.

The businessma­n is Lu Heng, a Hong Kong-based arbitrage specialist.

Under contested circumstan­ces, he obtained 6.2 million African addresses from 2013 to 2016. That’s about 5% of the continent’s total — more than Kenya has.

The internet service providers and others to whom AFRINIC assigns IP address blocks aren’t purchasing them. They pay membership fees to cover administra­tive costs that are intentiona­lly kept low. That left lots of room, though, for graft.

When AFRINIC revoked Lu’s addresses, now worth about $150 million, he fought back. His lawyers

in late July persuaded a judge in Mauritius, where AFRICNIC is based, to freeze its bank accounts. His company also filed a $80 million defamation claim against AFRINIC and its new CEO.

It’s a shock to the global networking community, which has long considered the internet as technologi­cal scaffoldin­g for advancing society. Some worry it could undermine the entire numerical address system that makes the internet work.

“There was never really any thought, particular­ly in the AFRINIC region, that someone would just directly attack a foundation­al element of internet governance and just try and shut it down, try and make it go away.” said Bill Woodcock, executive director of Packet Clearing House, a global nonprofit that has helped build out Africa’s internet.

Lu told The Associated Press that he’s an honest businessma­n who broke no rules in obtaining the African address blocks. And, rejecting the consensus of the internet’s stewards, he says its five regional registries have no business deciding where IP addresses are used.

“AFRINIC is supposed to serve the internet, it’s not supposed to serve Africa,” Lu said. “They’re just bookkeeper­s.”

In revoking Lu’s address blocks, AFRINIC is trying to reclaim internet real estate critical for a continent that lags the rest in leveraging internet resources to raise living standards and boost health and education. Africa has been allocated just 3% of the world’s first-generation IP addresses.

Making things worse: the alleged theft of millions of AFRINIC IP addresses, involving the organizati­on’s former No. 2 official, Ernest Byaruhanga, who

 ?? BRIAN INGANGA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Instead of serving Africa’s internet developmen­t, millions of internet addresses reserved for Africa have been waylaid, some fraudulent­ly.
BRIAN INGANGA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Instead of serving Africa’s internet developmen­t, millions of internet addresses reserved for Africa have been waylaid, some fraudulent­ly.

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