In the world of global telecommunications, there are visionaries, and then there are the people who actually build the pipes.
Sunil Bharti Mittal, the founder and chairman of Bharti Enterprises, has spent decades doing the latter, and the GSMA just handed him its highest honor to prove it.
At the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona, Mittal was conferred with the GSMA Lifetime Achievement Award.
It is a rare hall of fame moment in the industry, an honor reserved for only a handful of leaders who have fundamentally reshaped how billions of people talk, text, and transact.
The ceremony was a high-stakes affair, attended by His Majesty Felipe VI of Spain, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, and the global elite of the telecom world.
The Architect of Emerging Market Connectivity
Mittal isn’t just a corporate chair; he is the architect of Bharti Airtel, a top-three global operator that serves over half a billion customers across India and Africa.
For African tech observers, Mittal’s legacy is tied to the aggressive expansion of mobile services in emerging markets.
He didn’t just bring phones to cities; he championed the low-cost, high-volume model that made digital inclusion a reality for the unconnected.
The Mittal Track Record:
- Chairman of GSMA (2017–2018): He led the global body during a pivotal shift toward 5G and massive infrastructure investment.
- The Global Footprint: Built Airtel into a 14-country powerhouse in Africa, proving that an Indian telecom model could scale across the continent.
- Triple Crown: This isn’t his first GSMA nod; he bagged the Chairman’s Award in 2008 and 2016. This lifetime achievement award is the “final boss” of industry accolades.
A Tribute to the Global South
Accepting the award, Mittal framed the moment as more than just a personal win. He characterized it as a nod to the rise of Indian and emerging market telecom companies on the global stage.
“Telecommunication is a force that expands opportunity, places essential services in the palm of every individual, and unlocks human potential,” Mittal said. “As innovation accelerates, we will continue to ensure that growth advances equity.”
Techeconomy Take:
Mittal’s win is a significant signal for the Global South. It acknowledges that the most impactful innovations in telecom over the last 20 years haven’t just come from Silicon Valley or Helsinki, but from the rugged, high-growth markets of India and Africa.
Airtel’s journey, from a small bicycle parts business to a half-billion-customer telco, is the ultimate scale story that every African founder studies. In a world now obsessed with AI and 6G, Mittal’s award is a reminder that none of it works without the massive, resilient infrastructure that leaders like him spent a lifetime laying down.




