Namibia’s largest mobile telecommunications operator, MTC, and Botswana Fiber Networks, the state owned wholesale telecommunications infrastructure provider commonly known as BoFiNet, have formalised a cross border connectivity agreement aimed at strengthening digital infrastructure between the two neighbouring countries.
The memorandum of understanding was signed in Gaborone and establishes a structured framework for cross border fibre interconnection, capacity exchange and IP transit collaboration. According to a statement released by MTC, the agreement places particular emphasis on enhancing the Buitepos Ngoma corridor, a strategic route linking eastern Namibia and northern Botswana.
MTC, which is majority owned by Namibia Post and Telecommunications Holdings and listed on the Namibian Stock Exchange, is the country’s leading mobile operator by market share. Its network expansion strategy has increasingly focused on positioning Namibia as a regional digital transit hub within Southern Africa. The company’s managing director, Licky Erastus, described the Buitepos Ngoma corridor as a key operational entry point into Botswana’s wholesale ecosystem and as part of Namibia’s broader ambition to serve as a digital gateway market within the region. Further corporate information is available on the company’s official website.
BoFiNet was established in 2012 to manage and expand Botswana’s national and international fibre backbone infrastructure, as outlined in its institutional profile and public records including its background summary. As a wholesale provider, it supplies capacity to licensed service providers rather than retail consumers. The organisation plays a central role in Botswana’s efforts to diversify its economy through digital transformation and improved connectivity.
The Buitepos Ngoma corridor connects Namibia’s Omaheke Region with Botswana’s Chobe District and forms part of a broader transport and trade axis that facilitates the movement of goods and services across borders. Strengthening fibre interconnection along this route is expected to improve redundancy, reduce latency and enhance network resilience for both countries. In practical terms, improved cross border capacity can support financial services, e government platforms, educational institutions and small and medium sized enterprises that rely on stable broadband connectivity.
BoFiNet’s acting chief executive officer, Keabetswe Segole, characterised the agreement as strategic at a national level, linking infrastructure development with long standing bilateral relations between Botswana and Namibia. Both countries are members of the Southern African Development Community, which has consistently emphasised regional infrastructure integration as a foundation for economic cooperation and digital inclusion.
Cross border fibre agreements of this nature are increasingly evident across the continent as African states seek to reduce reliance on extra continental routing of internet traffic and to retain more data exchange within regional networks. By expanding direct interconnections, operators can lower wholesale costs, improve quality of service and strengthen digital sovereignty. Within Southern Africa, enhanced terrestrial fibre links complement existing submarine cable systems that land along the Atlantic and Indian Ocean coasts.
While the financial terms of the agreement have not been disclosed, the collaboration reflects a broader continental trend in which African telecommunications entities are pursuing partnerships grounded in shared infrastructure and mutual capacity building. In this context, the Namibia Botswana initiative may be viewed as part of an incremental but deliberate effort to reinforce regional digital resilience through locally anchored investment and cooperation.
The agreement does not signal exclusivity, nor does it replace existing international partnerships. Rather, it adds a layer of interconnection that may increase route diversity and operational flexibility for service providers in both countries. Such developments can contribute to more competitive wholesale markets and potentially translate into improved service quality for end users over time.
As Southern Africa continues to advance its digital economy agenda, cross border infrastructure agreements such as this one underscore the importance of collaborative frameworks that recognise shared geography, shared markets and shared developmental priorities. In that sense, the Buitepos Ngoma corridor represents more than a technical interconnect point. It reflects a regional approach to connectivity that situates African countries not merely as endpoints of global networks but as active architects of their own digital futures.







