Parliament has opened public consultations on the Protection of Sovereignty Bill, 2026. The name sounds like a flag on a pole. The clauses read like a net.
On paper, the Bill wants to guard Uganda against outside pressure. In practice, it does something no other country has tried: it takes Ugandans living abroad and, for the purpose of this law, calls them “foreigners.”
That one sentence changes the country.
The Clause That Redraws Citizenship
The Bill defines a “foreigner” to include “Ugandan citizens residing abroad.”
Read that again.
A son in Boston sending money for rent in Kansanga. A daughter in Dubai paying school fees for her sister in Mbale. A father in London financing a boda boda for his brother in Gulu. Under this Bill, all three are foreign. Their money is foreign. Their help is foreign influence.
This is not about passports. It is about reach. The law does not take your citizenship. It takes your relationship and puts it under watch.
For a country where remittances were $1.4 billion last year, that is not a footnote. That is the second budget.
Then It Defines an “Agent”
The net widens with the next definition. An “agent of a foreigner” is anyone “directly or indirectly financed or subsidised” by a foreigner.
Notice the words. Not “controlled.” Not “instructed.” Just financed.
Your cousin in Qatar sends you Shs 2 million to boost your salon. You are an agent.
A radio station in Lira gets a grant from a foundation in Sweden to train reporters. The reporters are agents.
A coffee cooperative in Masaka takes a loan from a diaspora SACCO in Canada. The farmers are agents.
Once you are an agent, the Bill’s rules follow you. Your bank asks questions. Your contracts need review. Your work becomes political, even if you sell tomatoes.
The Shs 400 Million Ceiling
Clause 22 puts a number on it. Any foreign funding above roughly Shs 400 million in 12 months needs ministerial approval.
Four hundred million sounds big until you build anything.
A private clinic in Mbarara with an X-ray machine, funded by doctors in the UK. That is Shs 1.2 billion.
A secondary school in Arua with a science block, built by old students now in the US. That is Shs 800 million.
A maize mill in Iganga, capital from a sister in Saudi Arabia. That is Shs 500 million.
All three now queue at a ministry for permission to exist. Permission can delay. Permission can be denied. Permission can come with conditions.
Investment hates queues. Investment fears conditions. The Uganda Bankers Association has already warned that this clause alone could freeze loans, stall construction, and scare off partnerships. Banks do not lend into uncertainty. They lend into law.
The Crime of Saying Things Are Bad
Clause 13 creates the offence of “economic sabotage.” It criminalises publishing information “that weakens or damages the economic system.”
The words “weakens or damages” are not defined.
An economist writes that debt repayment is eating 40% of revenue. Is that sabotage?
A newspaper reports that the shilling lost 3% in a week. Is that sabotage?
A market vendor tells a radio talk show that tomatoes are rotting because fuel is high. Is that sabotage?
Truth is not a defence if the law does not ask for truth. It asks for effect. If the shilling dips after the article, the article is a problem. This is how you silence data. This is how you make numbers feel patriotic or criminal.
“Against the Interests of Uganda” — Who Decides?*
Clause 5 bans activities that promote foreign interests “against the interests of Uganda.”
Again, no definition. No list. No test.
Is a lawyer in Kampala representing a Kenyan company suing a Ugandan firm acting against Uganda?
Is a tour operator marketing gorilla permits to American tourists promoting foreign interests?
Is a gospel singer taking money from a church in Texas to record an album an agent?
When a law leaves the definition to the enforcer, the enforcer becomes the law. Today it is one minister. Tomorrow it is another. The rule stays, the mood changes.
Why This Is Different From Other Countries
Many states regulate foreign money in politics. Ethiopia limits foreign funding for NGOs in advocacy. India tracks foreign grants to charities. America forces lobbyists to register.
None of them re-label their own citizens as foreign.
That is the line this Bill crosses. It does not just police outsiders. It manufactures outsiders from insiders. It takes the diaspora — the same people politicians fly to see during campaigns — and turns their love into liability.
You cannot call for diaspora investment in December and call diaspora investors foreign agents in January. Not without breaking trust.
Who Gets Hurt First
Not politicians. They have lawyers.
Not big multinationals. They have compliance departments.
The first hit goes to small people with big dreams and one relative abroad.
The woman in Ntinda whose boutique is stocked by her niece in Toronto.
The youth group in Soroti whose tractor was bought by brothers in Australia.
The lab technician in Jinja whose clinic upgrade came from classmates in Norway.
They do not have lawyers. They have WhatsApp receipts. The Bill does not read WhatsApp.
What Happens to the Economy
Uganda’s economy runs on three informal pillars: diaspora money, donor projects, and foreign loans. All three now sit under the word “foreigner.”
Tour operators need foreign tourists. That is foreign money.
Coffee exporters need foreign buyers. That is foreign interest.
Telecoms need foreign equipment financing. That is foreign control.
Audit firms need global partners. That is foreign influence.
Labour export companies need jobs in Dubai. That is foreign agency.
You cannot cut the root and keep the tree. You cannot call money bad and expect growth.
The Consultation Window Is Small
Parliament says this is a draft. It can change. That is true. Bills have died before. Clauses have been deleted. But bills also pass at 2AM when the room is tired and the cameras are off.
The timelines for submissions are out. If you are a coffee exporter, a tour operator, a pastor with church links, a banker, a lawyer, a journalist, a researcher, or a man with a brother abroad, this is your window.
Silence now is consent later. And this Bill, as written, does not just affect politics. It affects school fees from London. It affects boda bodas from Dubai. It affects the shop in Iganga.
Sovereignty is a good word. It means we decide for ourselves. But if the law decides that your family is foreign, then who is “ourselves”?
Read the Bill. Count your relatives. Do the math. Then speak.

