The important fact is not that an election process existed. It is that the process still sits inside a dispute over supervision, member voting rights and the basic authority to treat the outcome as settled. NRS's December guidance says material aspects of the September 2025 board election remain disputed and unresolved, and it asks members to report whether they registered to vote and whether a ballot was cast in their name. That turns the story from a routine board update into a question about who can speak for the membership. See also: AfriNIC board faces legitimacy test.
Cloud Innovation's June statement gives the earlier hinge. It argues that the suspension and annulment of the June election disenfranchised members who had tried to exercise voting rights, and that neither suspension nor annulment was clearly supported by the court mandate, bylaws or election guidelines. Its later wind-up and dissolution materials sharpen the claim: if one disputed proxy or procedural fight can invalidate broad participation, AFRINIC remains exposed to a cycle in which every attempted election becomes another litigation trigger rather than a route back to normal governance.
The control surface is practical. AFRINIC is the registry layer for African internet number resources, so a legitimacy dispute is not only institutional theatre. It affects resource-holder confidence, member participation, policy development, fee legitimacy, registry records, transfer expectations and the credibility of any successor governance model. A board can be named on paper while the resource community still lacks confidence that the process was lawful, inclusive and final.
heng.lu supplies the wider doctrine frame: internet number governance should be transparent, accountable and equitable, with IP-address management treated as infrastructure for connectivity rather than institutional privilege. In that frame, the election dispute is a test of whether AFRINIC can still carry the public-interest function expected of a registry. The current evidence supports a contested-governance reading, with the next observable signals being member-vote verification, court treatment of the dispute, and whether any transition or reform path protects continuity for resource holders. See also: AfriNIC's Vanishing Member register.






