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Uganda's Justice System Under Strain: Corruption, Case Delays, and Institutional Credibility Threaten Business Confidence

ABI Analysis · Uganda macro Sentiment: -0.60 (negative) · 17/03/2026
Uganda's judicial system is facing mounting pressures that extend far beyond individual cases, creating a concerning landscape for investors and entrepreneurs operating in the East African nation. Recent developments reveal systemic challenges ranging from high-profile case delays to widespread corruption within government institutions, all of which undermine the rule of law and business certainty. The most visible manifestation of these problems emerged in a high-profile case involving a law student accused of breaching court confidentiality by exposing sensitive legal records related to opposition figures. The bail hearing for this intern—known locally as "Laker"—stalled amid questions about judicial procedure and the handling of sensitive case materials. This incident raises troubling questions about court security protocols and the institutional safeguards protecting privileged information. For foreign investors, such breaches signal weak procedural controls within the judiciary itself. Compounding these concerns is the broader pattern of judicial inefficiency. The shooting of a Mukono police officer, which resulted in five suspects being remanded in custody, exemplifies cases that move through the system at glacial pace. When high-stakes criminal matters experience extended delays, it creates cascading effects throughout the legal system, overwhelming court schedules and frustrating all stakeholders. The credibility crisis extends to governance itself. Uganda's

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Gateway Intelligence
European investors in Uganda should immediately conduct enhanced due diligence on judicial and regulatory compliance mechanisms before significant capital deployment, particularly for sectors requiring strong contract enforcement (infrastructure, real estate, telecommunications). Consider structuring deals with international arbitration clauses rather than relying on domestic courts, and establish relationships with established local legal firms experienced in navigating institutional inconsistencies. The government's anti-corruption drive offers short-term political cover but may not translate to systemic improvements; monitor enforcement outcomes over the next 90 days before expanding operations.

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Sources: Daily Monitor Uganda, Daily Monitor Uganda, Daily Monitor Uganda, Daily Monitor Uganda, Daily Monitor Uganda, AllAfrica

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