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Uganda’s president signs contentious law meant to curb foreign influence

By Thomson Reuters May 18, 2026 | 1:09 AM

KAMPALA, May 18 (Reuters) – Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni signed into law a contentious measure to curb foreign influence after parliament scaled back provisions that had drawn criticism ​from financial institutions over potentially hampering remittances and development ‌work.

The bill criminalises promotion of the “interests of a foreigner against the interests of Uganda” and bans anyone working on behalf of foreign interests from developing or implementing policy without government approval.

Rights groups have said that such ‌broad ​language would allow the government to ⁠criminalise just about any form ⁠of political opposition. The government has accused critics of exaggerating the bill’s impact.

Museveni, who has been in power since 1986, has regularly decried outside influence in Uganda, accusing domestic ​political rivals of receiving funding from abroad.

His office announced late on Sunday that he had signed the “Protection of Sovereignty” bill, ⁠which parliament had adopted on May ⁠5. Penalties for violations include up to 10 years ​in prison and steep cash fines.

The final legislation softened several ​earlier provisions that had been criticised by economic institutions.

One that ‌required any Ugandan receiving money from abroad to register as a foreign agent and disclose incoming funds was amended to apply only to people receiving funds for political purposes that advance ⁠foreign interests.

Remittances from Ugandans living abroad are an important source of foreign exchange for the east Africa nation.

Central Bank governor Michael Atingi-Ego ⁠had warned last ‌month that the law could diminish financial flows ⁠into Uganda and risked running down foreign ​exchange reserves, ‌in a situation he called an “economic disaster ​for our ⁠country”.

The World Bank also criticised the earlier proposal, saying it could expose to criminal liability a broad range of “routine development activities”.

Neither the Central Bank nor the World Bank have commented on the amendments to the original bill.

(Editing by Vincent Mumo Nzilani, Clarence Fernandez ​and Alison Williams)