Legal updates and opinions
News / News
Untangling the mischief of section 43 of the Electronic Communications Act: A missed opportunity in the Amendment Bill
by Corlett Manaka, Director and Head of Disputes, Akhona Bilatyi, Director and Koketso Rapoo, Senior Associate
On 12 March 2026, the Minister of Communications and Digital Technologies, Mr Solly Malatsi, published for public comment the Draft Policy Direction on Matters Relevant to Electronic Communications Network Deployment Pursuant to the National Policy on Rapid Deployment of Electronic Communications Networks and Facilities, 2023 (“the Draft Policy”).
The Draft Policy largely concentrates on the rapid deployment of electronic communications facilities with the objectives being to give effect to existing national and sector policy pertaining to access required to use of both public and private land in order to facilitate the rollout of nationwide affordable high-speed broadband networks, it directs the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (“ICASA“) to review and if necessary, strengthen the Facilities Leasing Regulations promulgated under the Electronic Communications Act, 2005 (“ECA“) having particular regard to:
- the qualifying criteria for licensees who wish to exercise their section 22 rights. As a minimum, ICASA is directed that this qualifying criteria must include that the licensee holds a valid electronic communication network service license and is incompliance with their obligations in accordance with the license; there are no other suitable forms of access requested to the facilities identified; and the requesting licensee has made available to ICASA the location of all of the facilities;
- the determination of essential facilities and the terms on which access to essential facilities will be granted;
- the concept of open access;
- improving the time within which requests must be considered and approved, and agreements finalised by licensees in terms of chapter 8 of the ECA; and
- monitoring, enforcement and implementation of the amended Facilities Leasing Regulations, which shall include the filling of all agreements with ICASA.
The explanatory memorandum to the Draft Policy, in respect of facilities leasing, further records that whilst the Facilities Leasing Regulations have been helpful in facilitating network-sharing and network access to enable competitors to avoid duplicating infrastructure, reducing the strain on the environment and reducing costs, the impact of the Regulations on network deployment and affordable access has not been assessed.
Although ICASA is yet to amend the Facilities Leasing Regulations, on 20 April 2026, the Minister introduced, in the National Assembly, the Electronic Communications Amendment Bill (“Amendment Bill“). In respect to facilities leasing, the Amendment Bill proposes the following amendments to the ECA:
- the addition of “AND WHOLESALE PRICING RULES OR STANDARDS” in the heading of Chapter 8 of the ECA;
- the inclusion in section 43(8) of an obligation on ICASA to prescribe the list of essential facilities within 12 months of the coming into operation of the Amendment Act;
- the amendment of the days provided for in section 43(8A) (b) for licensees receiving requests for leasing facilities to agree on non-discriminatory terms and the conditions for facilities leasing within 60 days and no longer 20 days and where there is a dispute on the non-discriminatory terms, that such conditions be imposed by ICASA within 60 days of receiving notification of the failure to reach an agreement; and
- the review of the Facilities Leasing Regulations at least once every 24 months with due regard to market and legal developments.
Similar to the memorandum to the Draft Policy, the memorandum on the objects of the amendment bill indicates that the Amendment Bill seeks to improve the facilities leasing framework. Hopefully the introduction of the Amendment Bill (and to some extent the Draft Policy) will lead to a more defined process for purposes of implementing section 43 (1) of the ECA read with Regulation 3 of the Facilities Leasing Regulations.
Section 43(1) of the ECA provides an obligation on licensees to, on request, lease electronic communications facilities (i.e. infrastructure) to another licensee (including exemption holders) subject to terms and conditions of an electronic communications facilities lease agreement which the parties must enter into, unless the request is considered unreasonable (often arising from economic or technical feasibility). A clear issue that has arisen is the interpretation of section 43(1) of the ECA relating to which party must initiate the process of facilities leasing and the corresponding rights and/or obligations of the respective parties, namely, the “facilities seeker” and the facilities provider”.
The issue raised above is compounded by the conflicting judgments handed by the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria in Octotel (Pty) Ltd v Chairperson, Independent Communications Authority of South Africa and Others 2026 JDR 0307 (GP) and Metrofibre Networx (Pty) Ltd v Independent Communications Authority of South Africa and others 2024 JDR 4018 (GP), on the interpretation of the said section insofar as which party must trigger the process, and further on the issue as to whether ownership of the electronic facilities, is an element to be considered in determining the process under section 43(1) of the ECA.
While both of these cases are currently on appeal in the Supreme Court of Appeal, it may have been beneficial for the drafters of the Amendment Bill to use the opportunity to add clarification language in the Amendment Bill which clarifies the interpretative mischief.
Latest News
Your customer consented to direct marketing – but can you still contact them after they have registered on the National Opt-Out Registry?
by Tebogo Sibidla, Director Many businesses assume that once a customer has consented to direct marketing, they may continue contacting [...]
Employers have rights too: Rebalancing the modern workplace
by Bradley Workman-Davies, Director South African labour law is often discussed through the lens of employee protection. That is unsurprising. [...]
From policy direction to regulation: Is South Africa finally achieving rapid deployment?
by Corlett Manaka, Director and Head of Disputes, Akhona Bilatyi, Director and Kuhle Joja, Associate In September 2024, we published [...]
South Africa: Merger Notification Thresholds and Filing Fees Increase from 1 May 2026
by Ahmore Burger-Smidt, Director and Head of Regulatory and Raisah O Mahomed, Associate South Africa's Minister of Trade, Industry and [...]
“Corporate Death by Winding-Up”: Pretoria High Court Reaffirms the Badenhorst Principle
by Eric Levenstein, Director and Head Insolvency & Business Rescue, Amy Mackechnie, Senior Associate and Clio Patricios, Candidate Attorney A [...]
South Africa’s Information Regulator: What the 2025/26 Annual Performance Plan means for Business (as presented to the Portfolio Committee on 5 May 2026
by Ahmore Burger-Smidt, Director and Head of Regulatory “It is only the inner sanctum of a person, such as his/her [...]
