Business
EU Hits Elon Musk’s X With $140m Fine Over Transparency Failures, Washington Calls It an ‘Attack on America’
The European Union has slapped Elon Musk’s X with a €120 million ($140 million) fine — its first-ever noncompliance ruling under the bloc’s sweeping Digital Services Act (DSA).
And while Brussels says the punishment is about transparency and user protection, furious reactions from Washington suggest the decision could revive a long-simmering transatlantic clash over free speech and tech regulation.
The EU’s executive arm, the European Commission, announced Friday, December 5, 2025, that X violated three key transparency rules designed to stop deception, improve ad oversight, and give researchers better access to public data.
Officials in Brussels insist the move is about enforcing the law, not punishing foreign companies. But leading U.S. political figures — including President Donald Trump’s administration — are calling it censorship by another name.
Washington Explodes: “An Attack on the American People”
Within minutes of the announcement, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio blasted the fine on his X account:
“The European Commission’s $140 million fine isn’t just an attack on @X, it’s an attack on all American tech platforms and the American people,” Musk responded directly, agreeing with the sentiment.
Vice President JD Vance went further, accusing the EU of penalizing X “for not engaging in censorship.”
This pushback reflects a deep divide: Brussels is prioritizing platform accountability, while Washington’s current leadership sees the rules as an assault on free expression.
Why the EU Says It Fined X
Regulators say X broke transparency rules in three major areas:
1. Misleading “Blue Checkmarks”
Once reserved for public figures, the verification badge is now available to anyone willing to pay $8 per month. The Commission says that shift misleads users into trusting accounts that are not actually verified.
X’s approach, regulators argue, makes it harder to distinguish real accounts from impostors — a vulnerability that opens doors for scams, misinformation, and political manipulation.
2. A Flawed Ad Transparency Database
Under the DSA, platforms must maintain accessible databases showing:
- who paid for digital ads
- targeting details
- how widely an ad was shown
X’s system, Brussels says, is riddled with delays and technical barriers that make it difficult for researchers or watchdogs to track political influence operations or fraudulent advertising.
3. Blocking Researchers From Studying Public Data
The Commission says X has erected “unnecessary barriers” to independent researchers who want to analyze how misinformation spreads or how the platform moderates harmful content.
“Deceiving users with blue checkmarks, obscuring information on ads, and shutting out researchers have no place online in the EU,”
— Henna Virkkunen, EU executive vice-president for tech sovereignty, security and democracy
Musk’s Platform Has Not Commented
X did not respond immediately to the Commission’s announcement — though Musk has repeatedly condemned the DSA as incompatible with free speech.
The ruling marks the first noncompliance fine under the EU’s DSA, but it won’t be the last. TikTok, Meta, Amazon, and Google all face active investigations.
On the same day as the X ruling, the EU closed a case against TikTok after the company agreed to overhaul its ad transparency tools.
What This Means for Global Platforms
For companies operating in Europe, the message is blunt: Follow the rules or pay heavily.
For the United States, the fine intensifies a wider political fight over who gets to define “free speech” in the digital age.
And for global users, especially those outside Western power blocs — including Africa and the broader Global South — the case highlights an ongoing tension: Silicon Valley builds the platforms, Washington defends them, and Brussels regulates them.
Caught in the middle are millions of people simply trying to navigate an increasingly ungoverned online world.
The stakes are only getting higher.
Business
Renowned Global Bodies Warn Middle East War Will Scuttle Africa’s 2026 Growth
Four leading African and global development institutions have issued a stark joint warning that the escalating Middle East conflict is transmitting economic shocks to Africa faster and more intensely than previous global disruptions, potentially shaving at least 0.2 percentage points off the continent’s GDP growth in 2026 if the crisis lasts beyond six months.
The African Development Bank Group (AfDB), African Union Commission (AUC), United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), and United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) released the policy brief on April 2, 2026, on the sidelines of the 58th Session of the Economic Commission for Africa.
The brief highlights surging fuel and food prices, higher shipping and insurance costs, exchange rate pressures, and tightening fiscal space as the main transmission channels.
Oil prices have already risen by 50% since the conflict intensified, while disruptions to the Strait of Hormuz — which handles about 20% of global oil exports — have drastically reduced traffic. The Middle East accounts for 15.8% of Africa’s imports and 10.9% of its exports.
The brief identifies fertilizer supply disruptions as potentially even more damaging than the oil shock for some countries, as reduced Gulf LNG supply affects ammonia and urea production during the critical planting season. Currencies in 29 African countries have already depreciated, raising debt servicing costs and making imports more expensive.
Particularly vulnerable nations include Senegal, Sudan, Cabo Verde, South Sudan, and The Gambia. However, some countries may see limited gains: Nigeria from higher oil prices and refined exports via the Dangote Refinery, Mozambique from LNG opportunities, and ports in South Africa, Namibia, Mauritius, and Kenya from rerouted shipping.
The institutions called for immediate coordinated action, including pooled fuel procurement, emergency food corridors, diversified fertilizer sourcing, and targeted social protection.
In the medium to long term, they urged accelerated renewable energy deployment, deeper AfCFTA integration, and the creation of a Continental Crisis and Resilience Compact focused on energy and food security, financial safety nets, and greater strategic autonomy.
This coordinated alert from Africa’s premier development bodies underscores the urgent need for the continent to move beyond reactive measures toward structural solutions that build long-term resilience against global shocks.
Business
Ghana Turns to Russian Fuel to Cushion Impact of Global Energy Crisis
Accra, Ghana – As global fuel markets face severe disruptions from escalating tensions involving Iran and the potential closure of key shipping routes like the Strait of Hormuz, Ghana is emerging as one of the more insulated economies in Africa by diversifying its energy supplies, including through increased imports from Russia.
A tanker carrying approximately 320,000 barrels of refined petroleum products from Russia is currently en route to Ghana’s main oil hub in Tema, per a report by Business Insider Africa. The vessel, Hellas Fighter, loaded at Vysotsk and last tracked passing Mauritania, is expected to arrive on April 6. This shipment reflects Ghana’s pragmatic strategy to widen its supplier base amid uncertainty in traditional supply chains.
President John Dramani Mahama recently stated that Ghana currently has enough petroleum stocks to last about six weeks. Speaking at the World Affairs Council in Philadelphia, he acknowledged that fuel prices affect virtually every sector of the economy but assured that the government is taking steps to cushion the impact and secure additional supplies.
“We are making a real push to ensure that the economy is cushioned,” Mahama said, while expressing hope that “cooler heads will prevail” in the ongoing crisis.
The move toward Russian fuel highlights a broader shift across parts of Africa, where countries are actively diversifying sources to mitigate risks from global shocks, shipping disruptions, and price volatility.
While many sub-Saharan nations remain highly vulnerable due to heavy reliance on imports and foreign exchange constraints, Ghana’s approach demonstrates an effort to maintain stability through strategic sourcing.
Business
Ghana Restricts Bidding for Gold Fields’ Damang Mine to Locally Owned Companies
Accra, Ghana – Ghana has limited the tender process for the takeover of Gold Fields Ltd.’s Damang gold mine to companies that are 100% owned by Ghanaian citizens, as the government prepares to assume full control of the asset in April 2026.
The decision, outlined in a notice dated March 24 and signed by Lands and Natural Resources Minister Emmanuel Armah-Kofi Buah, reflects the country’s broader push to increase local ownership and participation in its mining sector. The deadline for submitting offers is Tuesday, March 31, 2026.
Gold Fields, which has operated Damang for nearly 30 years, saw its mining lease expire last year. The government granted a 12-month extension to ensure a smooth transition, during which the company restarted mining activities and submitted a detailed feasibility study to extend the mine’s operational life. Damang produced 88,000 ounces of gold last year.
Under the tender requirements, the successful bidder must have proven experience in open-pit gold mining, the capacity to operate the mine for at least another decade, and access to more than $500 million in funding for project development. The eventual owner will take over the asset on April 18.
This move aligns with a continental trend of African governments seeking greater control and revenue shares from their natural resources. In Ghana, major mines are still largely owned by multinational companies such as AngloGold Ashanti, Newmont, and China’s Zijin Mining. The Damang transition is being watched closely as a test case for increasing indigenous involvement in the sector.
Gold Fields is also negotiating a lease extension for its larger Tarkwa operation. Since 2000, the company has invested approximately $5 billion in its Ghanaian operations and contributed around $2.9 billion to the state through taxes, royalties, and dividends. It currently employs more than 7,000 people in the country, 99% of whom are Ghanaian nationals.
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