Professional baseline
Published AFRINIC materials place Sanderson in strategic marketing, communications, stakeholder engagement, Teraco executive-team participation and NAPAfrica community building.
Purported AFRINIC Board Seat 5 / Southern Africa under public-interest review for election-process reliance, data-centre and IXP ecosystem proximity, registry chokepoint accountability, anti-leasing posture, member-rights impact and public-answer status. The central danger for readers is control without clearly proven authority.

A board-seat person whose published materials connect Teraco, NAPAfrica, data-centre infrastructure, peering communities and stakeholder communication understands how ordinary address use supports connectivity, cloud, CDN, hosting, data-centre and IXP services. That makes the public position on anti-leasing rhetoric and member-rights reduction especially important.
Published AFRINIC materials place Sanderson in strategic marketing, communications, stakeholder engagement, Teraco executive-team participation and NAPAfrica community building.
Any later board action relies on the lawful effect and integrity of the election process that produced the purported Board seat.
The practical question is simple: support, reject, abstain, or no position on anti-leasing rhetoric, registry chokepoint use and member-rights reduction.
Based on the public material available on nrs.help, this profile is not a personal misconduct finding. It explains why a reasonable reader should be concerned if Carla Sanderson — purported AFRINIC Board Seat 5 / Southern Africa — exercises or supports AFRINIC registry control before the authority chain, election integrity and member-rights questions are transparently resolved.
NRS warns that operators who give customers dynamic IPs, static IPs, cloud public IPs, data-centre IP bundles, assignments or sub-allocations all depend on downstream address use. If that model is relabelled as suspect “leasing,” the pressure is no longer about one company; it can reach ordinary ISP, cloud, hosting, telecom, data-centre and IXP operations.
NRS frames the current problem as a disputed authority chain: the Receiver organised the election, the purported Board relies on that process, and communications are issued in AFRINIC's name while members still need to know who is lawfully empowered to speak and act for the registry.
NRS says questions were sent to named individuals and records no public answer received yet. For readers, the unresolved issue is whether Sanderson supports, rejects, abstains from, or has no position on registry chokepoint pressure, anti-leasing rhetoric and member-rights reduction.
If Sanderson participates in AFRINIC control without a clearly documented and validated mandate, the risk is operational: renewals, transfers, registry records, RPKI dependence, compliance narratives and public legitimacy can become pressure points before affected members have a fair chance to defend their networks.
The reasonable public request is simple. A named person should answer in their own name whether they support using AFRINIC's registry chokepoint against ordinary downstream address use and whether they accept acting before authority is properly validated.
The timeline records published facts and the points where NRS accountability questions attach.
The executive CV lists various roles at Futuristix from 1994 to 2001, before later marketing leadership positions in industrial automation, IT services and enterprise solutions.
The candidate materials and CV describe senior marketing roles at Wonderware Southern Africa / Futuristix, EOH Group and TransUnion Africa, establishing the communications and technology-sector baseline for the profile.
AFRINIC materials say Sanderson has served as Head of Marketing at Teraco – A Digital Realty Company since 2010, leading marketing, communications, brand and research for a major African data-centre platform.
Her candidate page and CV say she leads marketing and community-building initiatives for NAPAfrica, described as a non-profit subsidiary of Teraco and the largest IXP on the African continent.
The AFRINIC candidate page says Sanderson served as a member of the Open-IX Association, contributing to neutral Internet-exchange and data-centre standards.
AFRINIC’s NomCom announced the 2025 Board candidate slate and directed community and resource members to the Election Portal for candidate details. Sanderson’s candidate profile is dated 09 September 2025.
The slate announcement says electronic voting was scheduled from 10 September 2025 at 12:00 MUT to 12 September 2025 at 20:00 MUT via the Voatz platform.
AFRINIC result records list Mrs Carla Sanderson as elected for Board Seat 5 / Southern Africa.
NRS names Carla Sanderson among the purported Board people behind the authority problem and records public questions about anti-leasing rhetoric, registry chokepoint power and who lawfully speaks for AFRINIC.
NRS records that questions were sent to named individuals and that no public answer had been received yet. This page preserves that as a public-answer gap, not a finding.
Each item is framed as a public-accountability risk, not a finding. Each issue should be backed by source documents before legal, regulatory or public escalation.
NRS is asking named individuals, not an abstract institution. A direct public answer narrows the record; silence expands the record gap.
When a public profile is built around data-centre infrastructure and IXP community building, the position on downstream address use should be explicit and attributable.
Public-source statements are linked below. The NRS control-risk framing is based on NRS Red Alert, NRS governance-vacuum / USD 100 liability warning, NRS election-integrity notice, and NRS regional-lock warning. This page should be read as a public-accountability profile, not as a legal judgment or unsupported personal allegation.
Names Carla Sanderson as purported Board Seat 5 and records the public questions / no-answer status. Open source
Explains the structural-risk frame: registry control, legal insulation, regional lock-in and operational exposure for telecom, ISP, cloud, banking, IXP and government networks. Open source
Records NRS's position that the September 2025 AFRINIC Board election has not been lawfully or conclusively completed and invites factual reports of voting irregularities. Open source
Frames regional marking of AFRINIC-managed resources as a lock-in mechanism and links the risk to disputed board authority and member asset mobility. Open source
AFRINIC election page with photo, Seat 5, nationality, residence, affiliation, position, motivation and biography. Open source
Candidate CV describing Teraco, NAPAfrica, Open-IX, TransUnion Africa, EOH and Wonderware / Futuristix experience. Open source
Official announcement listing Mrs Carla Sanderson for Board Seat 5 / Southern Africa. Open source
NomCom slate announcement and electronic voting period / Voatz platform note. Open source
Election portal list of elected candidates and their seats; the portal lists Carla Sanderson for Seat 5. Open source
AFRINIC Seat Five candidate pack describing her Southern Africa candidacy and NAPAfrica / Teraco background. Open source
Portrait embedded from AFRINIC Election 2025 public candidate image. Open portrait source