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Uganda's Amended Protection of Sovereignty Act: What Foreign Investors Need to Check

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Uganda’s amended Protection of Sovereignty Act (PSA), signed into law on 22 May 2026 after presidential assent on 17 May 2026, has fundamentally reshaped the legal landscape for foreign funding in the country. Originally introduced as the Protection of Sovereignty Bill (Bill No. 13 of 2026) with sweeping provisions that would have criminalised broad categories of foreign engagement, the Act was significantly narrowed after sustained public outcry and parliamentary committee review. The amended law now targets foreign political financing rather than all foreign-sourced funding, expressly exempting lawful foreign direct investment, portfolio investment and activities of entities regulated under an Act of Parliament.

For foreign investors, private equity teams and in-house counsel operating in Uganda, the practical consequence is clear: headline commercial risk has been lowered, but a careful case-by-case assessment remains essential to distinguish legitimate commercial activity from conduct the Act treats as foreign political interference.

What to do now:

  • Map every inbound funding stream against the Act’s definitions to confirm whether your activities fall within the “political activity” scope.
  • Confirm and document regulated-entity status for every Ugandan recipient in your corporate structure.
  • Structure agreements and keep records that clearly evidence commercial purpose, with audit and reporting covenants built in.

What the Amended Protection of Sovereignty Act Actually Restricts

The most important thing to understand about Uganda’s amended Protection of Sovereignty Act and its implications for foreign investors is this: the Act does not ban all foreign funding in Uganda. It restricts foreign political financing, meaning funding, direction or material support from non-Ugandan sources that is channelled toward political activities within the country.

The original Bill, as introduced in April 2026 and circulated by the Center for Constitutional Governance, contained provisions so broad that they would have captured routine commercial transactions, classified Ugandan citizens living abroad as “foreigners,” and imposed mandatory registration and criminal liability on a sweeping range of organisations and individuals. Public pressure from civil society, the business community and international observers forced a significant recalibration. According to the Parliament of Uganda’s own reporting, the amendments ditched the proposal to classify Ugandan citizens abroad as foreigners, narrowed the definition of targeted activity to focus on political operations, and exempted ordinary commercial and institutional engagement with foreign entities.

As enacted, the Act imposes criminal liability, mandatory registration and foreign-funding restrictions on organisations and individuals who receive foreign resources for the purpose of conducting political activities in Uganda. The Act also designates the Department responsible for peace and security within the Ministry of Internal Affairs as the lead enforcement body. Industry observers expect that the practical scope of enforcement will depend heavily on implementing regulations and ministerial guidance, neither of which had been published as of 1 July 2026.

Key Statutory Changes at a Glance

The journey from Bill to enacted law involved several critical amendments. Understanding what changed, and what survived, is essential for any compliance assessment.

  • Removal of diaspora classification. The original Bill would have treated Ugandan citizens resident abroad as “foreigners” for purposes of funding controls. This was dropped after the parliamentary Legal and Defence Committee review.
  • Narrowing of scope to political activities. The amendments specified that restrictions would primarily target “political activities” influenced by foreign actors, rather than applying to all forms of foreign engagement. Parliament Watch Uganda reported that this change was intended to exempt commercial, humanitarian, educational and health-sector activities from the Act’s reach.
  • Regulated-entity exemption inserted. The enacted text provides that nothing in the Act shall be construed as requiring compliance for lawful foreign direct investment, portfolio investment, or activities of entities regulated under an Act of Parliament.
  • Foreign funding declaration threshold. According to analysis by mmaks Advocates, an agent of a foreigner may not receive foreign financial support exceeding UGX 400 million in any 12-month period without declaring the funds to the Minister responsible.
  • Criminal liability retained. The Act retains criminal sanctions for persons who promote “the interests of a foreigner against those of Uganda” through political activity, an offence structure that the New York City Bar Association has described as vague and potentially overbroad.

Definitions That Matter to Investors: Foreigner, Political Activity and Agent

Three statutory definitions under the Protection of Sovereignty Act Uganda determine whether a particular transaction or relationship triggers compliance obligations. Getting these definitions wrong can expose an investor to criminal liability; getting them right can confirm that routine commercial operations fall outside the Act entirely.

“Foreigner” under the amended Act refers to non-Ugandan citizens, foreign governments and foreign-incorporated entities. Crucially, the Act no longer treats Ugandan nationals living abroad as foreigners, a change that directly responds to diaspora and civil-society objections documented in the Parliament of Uganda’s amendment notice.

“Political activity” encompasses actions intended to influence the political process in Uganda, including activities that promote the interests of a foreign principal against those of Uganda. The ISS Africa analysis notes that the Act criminalises foreign political funding specifically, while the Parliament Watch Uganda commentary confirms that the amendments sought to narrow the scope to political activities influenced by foreign actors, explicitly distinguishing these from commercial, charitable and educational engagement.

“Agent of a foreigner” is any person who receives foreign funding, assistance or “direction” and uses it for political activity as defined by the Act. The New York City Bar Association’s statement of concern highlighted that this definition, even as amended, remains broad enough to capture civil society organisations, media outlets and advocacy groups that receive any form of foreign support.

How “Political Activity” Is Defined, and Borderline Examples

The line between commercial engagement and political activity is not always obvious. The following decision grid illustrates how common foreign-funded activities may be classified under the Act and the recommended course of action for each.

Activity Type Likely Political? Recommended Action
Foreign direct investment in a manufacturing facility No Document under FDI exemption; retain investment licence records
Grant funding for civic education programme Borderline Obtain legal opinion; document educational (non-partisan) purpose; avoid election-period activity
Sponsorship of a political party event Yes Presumed captured; do not proceed without full legal clearance and registration
CSR programme in health or education No (if structured correctly) Ring-fence from political messaging; keep separate accounts and reporting
Funding for community mobilisation during election period High risk Defer activity or restructure to remove election-related elements; seek legal advice
Portfolio investment via licensed securities exchange No Falls within express exemption; retain brokerage and CMA records

Regulated-Entity Exemption: Who Qualifies and How to Prove It

One of the most commercially significant features of Uganda’s amended Protection of Sovereignty Act for foreign investors is the regulated-entity exemption. The Act’s text, as published on the Uganda Legal Information Institute (ULII), provides that nothing in the Act shall be construed as requiring compliance for activities carried out by an entity regulated under an Act of Parliament in pursuit of its lawful functions.

This exemption is designed to carve out organisations whose foreign funding is already subject to sectoral regulation and oversight. In practice, the following types of entities are most likely to qualify:

  • Banks and financial institutions regulated under the Financial Institutions Act and supervised by the Bank of Uganda.
  • Licensed telecommunications operators regulated by the Uganda Communications Commission under the Uganda Communications Act.
  • Insurance companies supervised under the Insurance Act.
  • Capital markets participants licensed and regulated by the Capital Markets Authority under the Capital Markets Authority Act.
  • NGOs registered under sector-specific legislation, for example, health-sector NGOs operating under the National Health Act, provided their activities remain within the scope of their regulatory mandate.
  • Public utilities and energy companies licensed by the Electricity Regulatory Authority.

Evidencing the Regulated-Entity Exemption in Practice

Qualifying for the exemption is necessary but not sufficient, an entity must also be able to prove it qualifies if challenged. The following documentation should be assembled and kept current:

  • Current licence or certificate of registration issued by the relevant statutory regulator.
  • The enabling Act of Parliament under which the entity is regulated (statutory instrument reference).
  • A letter from the relevant regulator confirming the entity’s status and the scope of regulated activities.
  • An internal legal opinion mapping the entity’s foreign-funded activities to the regulated scope.
  • Board minutes recording the entity’s reliance on the exemption and the documentation gathered.

Industry observers expect that the Ministry responsible for internal affairs may issue further guidance on how the exemption applies in borderline cases, for example, where a regulated entity undertakes activities that fall outside the strict scope of its regulatory licence. Until such guidance is published, a conservative approach is warranted.

Where Legitimate Commercial Funding Could Still Be Caught: Risk-Mapping and Red Flags

Even though the amended Act narrowed its focus to foreign political financing, the boundaries remain ambiguous enough that legitimate commercial funding could be caught in certain circumstances. The risk is highest where the purpose, timing or recipients of funding create an inference of political intent, regardless of the funder’s actual motivation.

The following scenarios represent the most common red flags that compliance teams should watch for:

  • Sponsorship of advocacy campaigns that overlap with political messaging. A foreign-funded corporate sustainability programme that advocates for policy reform could be read as promoting foreign interests against Uganda’s domestic policy positions.
  • Community development spending during election periods. Even routine CSR activities (road building, school construction) can attract scrutiny if they coincide with an election cycle and could be perceived as building support for a particular candidate or party.
  • Donations to charities or NGOs with dual mandates. Where a recipient charity operates both humanitarian programmes and political advocacy programmes, foreign funding intended for the humanitarian side could be treated as supporting the political side if funds are not ring-fenced.
  • Media sponsorship or content partnerships. Funding editorial content, journalism training or media platforms that cover political affairs creates exposure, particularly where the foreign funder’s editorial preferences could be construed as influencing Uganda’s political discourse.
  • Capacity-building programmes for government or parliamentary actors. Even well-intentioned foreign funding for governance training or institutional strengthening could be perceived as foreign direction of political institutions.

For each of these scenarios, the mitigation strategy is consistent: document commercial purpose explicitly, ring-fence funds from political activities, maintain separate accounting and reporting, and obtain independent legal advice before proceeding.

Practical Legal Checklist for Foreign Investors and In-House Counsel

This section provides a step-by-step compliance playbook for foreign investors and in-house counsel seeking to structure inbound funding safely under Uganda’s amended Protection of Sovereignty Act. Each step is designed to create a defensible paper trail that clearly separates commercial activity from political financing.

Step 1: Map all funding streams.

  • Identify every source of foreign funding entering your Ugandan operations, including equity contributions, inter-company loans, grant funding, sponsorship payments and in-kind contributions.
  • For each stream, document the origin (jurisdiction, entity type), routing (intermediary banks, escrow agents) and stated purpose.

Step 2: Trace beneficial owners and upstream funders.

  • Confirm the ultimate beneficial owner of every foreign funding source.
  • Where funding passes through intermediaries, obtain written confirmation of the original source and purpose.
  • Flag any funding that originates from or passes through a foreign government, political party or entity with known political affiliations.

Step 3: Confirm regulated-entity status.

  • For every Ugandan recipient entity in your corporate group, determine whether it is regulated under an Act of Parliament.
  • Assemble the documentation checklist described above (licence, regulator letter, enabling Act reference, legal opinion).
  • If the recipient is not a regulated entity, assess whether the funding could be restructured through a regulated subsidiary or affiliate.

Step 4: Structure agreements to emphasise commercial purpose.

  • Ensure that every funding agreement, loan facility, joint venture document or grant agreement includes explicit statements of commercial purpose.
  • Include audit and reporting covenants that require the recipient to account for how funds are used.
  • Prohibit the use of funds for political activities, and make this prohibition an event of default.

Step 5: Record board approvals and use earmarked accounts.

  • Obtain board resolutions approving the receipt and use of foreign funding, expressly noting the commercial purpose and the Act’s requirements.
  • Use dedicated bank accounts for foreign-sourced commercial payments, separate from any accounts used for CSR, advocacy or community engagement.

Step 6: Pre-clear communications and social programmes around election periods.

  • Review all planned public communications, community engagement activities and social programmes for any content that could be construed as political.
  • Where possible, defer discretionary community spending and public-facing advocacy to periods outside election cycles.
  • Obtain written legal clearance before launching any programme that touches on governance, policy reform or civic participation.

Step 7: Establish ongoing monitoring.

  • Assign a compliance officer or external counsel to monitor the issuance of implementing regulations and ministerial guidance under the Act.
  • Subscribe to official channels (Parliament of Uganda, Ministry of Internal Affairs, Uganda Gazette) and reputable legal update services.
  • Schedule quarterly internal reviews of all foreign funding streams against the Act’s definitions and any new regulatory guidance.

Monitoring, Registration Obligations, Enforcement and Penalties

The Act establishes a mandatory registration and declaration framework for persons and organisations that qualify as agents of foreigners engaged in political activity. Any person who receives foreign funding, assistance or “direction” that is used for political activity must register with the designated Department within the Ministry responsible for internal affairs.

According to analysis by mmaks Advocates, the Act imposes a specific foreign funding declaration threshold: an agent of a foreigner may not receive foreign financial support exceeding UGX 400 million (approximately USD 105,000) in any 12-month period without declaring the funds to the responsible Minister. Exceeding this threshold without declaration constitutes a contravention of the Act.

Criminal and administrative penalties apply to a range of contraventions. These include acting as an unregistered agent of a foreigner, failing to declare foreign funding above the threshold, and promoting the interests of a foreigner against those of Uganda through political activity. The New York City Bar Association noted in its statement of concern that the Act’s penalty provisions are broad and that the offence of promoting foreign interests “against those of Uganda” lacks the specificity normally required for criminal statutes.

How to Monitor for Implementing Guidance

As of 1 July 2026, no implementing regulations or ministerial guidance have been published under the Act. The likely practical effect will be that the regime remains partly dormant until such instruments are gazetted. Investors and their counsel should monitor the following channels:

  • The Parliament of Uganda website for legislative updates and committee reports.
  • The Uganda Gazette for statutory instruments and ministerial orders.
  • The Ministry of Internal Affairs for departmental circulars and registration procedures.
  • Reputable Ugandan law firms and business law specialists for professional analysis and alerts.

How Uganda’s Amended Law Compares with Other Foreign-Funding Regimes

Uganda’s amended Protection of Sovereignty Act sits within a growing global trend of foreign-influence legislation. The following comparison table maps Uganda’s regime against two well-established frameworks, the United States’ Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) and the United Kingdom’s evolving foreign influence measures, to help international counsel contextualise compliance obligations.

Jurisdiction Scope (What Is Regulated) Key Compliance Takeaway
Uganda, Protection of Sovereignty Act, 2026 (amended) Primarily foreign political financing; exemptions for regulated entities, lawful FDI and portfolio investment Map funding and purpose; document regulated-entity status; avoid politicised funding; declare amounts exceeding UGX 400 million
United States, Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) Requires registration for persons acting as agents of foreign principals in political or quasi-political capacity; broad disclosure obligations Prepare a FARA registration analysis for any activity that risks being characterised as political advocacy on behalf of a foreign principal; maintain detailed records of all communications and expenditures
United Kingdom, National Security Act 2023 / foreign influence measures Targets covert foreign influence and political interference; registration scheme for foreign influence arrangements (partially commenced) Monitor evolving disclosure obligations; maintain records of all foreign-linked communications and arrangements; register where required

Early indications suggest that Uganda’s regime, while narrower in formal scope than FARA (which captures a wider range of lobbying and public-relations activity), may prove more operationally challenging due to the lack of established enforcement precedent and the absence of implementing regulations. International investors accustomed to FARA compliance will find Uganda’s framework less procedurally developed but no less consequential in terms of criminal exposure.

Conclusion: Navigating Uganda’s Amended Protection of Sovereignty Act as a Foreign Investor

Uganda’s amended Protection of Sovereignty Act represents a significant recalibration from the original Bill’s broad reach to a more targeted foreign political financing regime. For foreign investors, the amended law’s express exemptions for lawful FDI, portfolio investment and regulated-entity activities provide meaningful protection, but only for those who take proactive steps to document their position. The Act’s vague offence definitions, the absence of implementing regulations, and the criminal penalties for non-compliance mean that a passive or assumption-based approach to compliance carries real risk.

The seven-step checklist set out in this article, mapping funding streams, tracing beneficial owners, confirming regulated-entity status, structuring agreements for commercial purpose, securing board approvals, pre-clearing election-period activities, and establishing ongoing monitoring, provides a practical framework for immediate action. Investors should treat this as a living compliance process, updating their assessment as implementing regulations and ministerial guidance are published.

For businesses that need to navigate Uganda’s amended Protection of Sovereignty Act and its foreign-funding requirements with confidence, qualified local counsel with deep knowledge of Uganda’s regulatory landscape is essential. Explore the Business practice area directory or the Uganda lawyer directory to connect with specialists who can provide tailored guidance.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dennis Otatiina at Dentons Advocates (Global Dentons Network), a member of the Global Law Experts network.

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