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Ugandan Artists' Copyright Prayer Finally Answered By Parliament

Ugandan Artists' Copyright Prayer Finally Answered By Parliament


Uganda’s Parliament on Tuesday passed the Copyright and Neighbouring Rights (Amendment) Bill, 2025, concluding years of debate and speculation over reforms aimed at strengthening protections and earnings for the country’s creative industry.

The bill cleared its Third Reading, the final stage of parliamentary approval, and now awaits assent from the President, Yoweri Kaguta Museveni before becoming law.

Its passage follows a tense week in which artists, producers and copyright organisations mounted an intense lobbying campaign to protect Clause 9, the provision widely seen as the economic backbone of the proposed reforms.

The turning point came during last week’s Second Reading debate in Parliament, where Hon David Kabanda supported by Anita Among, the Speaker of Parliament, raised concerns and opinions about Clause 9, triggering alarm across Uganda’s creative sector.

Clause 9 proposes a framework requiring broadcasters and commercial establishments such as bars, hotels and restaurants to compensate artists and rights holders when copyrighted music and other creative works are publicly used.

Many artists interpreted the Speaker’s remarks as a signal that the clause, and the financial protections it promises could be altered or removed before the bill’s final passage.

Within hours of the debate, leaders across the creative industry mobilised.

Artists and rights holders issued a joint statement through Collective Management Organisations (CMOs), urging Parliament not to tamper with the clause. Several individual artists and industry bodies also wrote letters directly to the Speaker explaining why the provision was essential to the survival of Uganda’s music and creative economy.

The pressure campaign intensified through the weekend, culminating in a closed-door meeting between sector leaders and the Speaker on Tuesday morning, hours before Parliament reconvened for the final session that would determine the bill’s fate.

Among those who attended the meeting were Martin Yoyo, chairperson of the Uganda Performing Right Society board; Eddy Kenzo, president of the Uganda National Musicians Federation and presidential adviser on creatives; Jeff Ekongot, chief executive of the Uganda Musicians Association; and Charles Batambuze, representing the Uganda Reproduction Rights Organisation, the collective management body for literary works.

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