If there is one constant in emerging market politics, it’s that a sharp rise in volatility almost always precedes a sharp rise in bad news. Today’s news from Kampala confirms that thesis. Uganda has charged a prominent human rights lawyer with treason. The timing is noteworthy: this comes as British diplomatic pressure on the regime intensifies. As a veteran of the Square Mile, I have seen how geopolitical risk becomes financial reality. Markets do not like uncertainty. They price it in with a spread. And this news adds a few basis points to the risk premium on Uganda's sovereign bonds, I suspect. Let’s break down the story with a cold eye on the bottom line.
The Ugandan government has charged the lawyer, whose identity is well known in human rights circles, with offenses related to communicating with what they call ‘hostile foreign entities’. The charge is treason. If convicted, the penalty is life imprisonment or death. This is not a minor legal tussle. It is a signal. The regime in Kampala is tightening its grip just as London is applying more pressure. The British Foreign Office has been increasingly vocal about human rights abuses in Uganda, particularly the treatment of opposition figures and the LGBTQ+ community. This charge appears to be a direct response: a warning to local professionals that cooperation with Western governments comes with severe personal risks.
Now, let us consider the market implications. Uganda’s economy is small but not insignificant. It is a major recipient of British aid and investment. The country exports coffee, tea, and minerals. Its sovereign debt is held by international investors. British pressure could lead to aid cuts or sanctions. That would be a fiscal shock. The government would need to borrow more, pushing up yields. The shilling might weaken. Capital flight is a real possibility. The lawyer’s charge is a canary in the coal mine. It tells us the political risk is rising. And that means the cost of capital is rising too. For the man on the street, this means higher prices for imported goods and lower growth. For the City, it means we downgrade our outlook on Ugandan assets.
But there is a broader lesson here. This is not just about one lawyer or one country. It is about the fragility of the rule of law in frontier markets. When governments weaponise treason charges, they undermine the certainty that investors crave. And without certainty, capital flees. It is that simple. The UK’s diplomatic pressure might be morally correct, but it creates a vacuum that Russian or Chinese investment might fill. That is the cynical arithmetic of geopolitics. The West’s leverage in Uganda is limited by the reality that other patrons are willing to look the other way. So, what is the forecast? Expect more volatility. The lawyer’s trial will be a litmus test for the regime’s commitment to legal norms. If it is a show trial, expect further downgrades. If there is a compromise, expect a relief rally. Either way, the risk is to the downside. For now, I advise caution on any Uganda exposure. The bottom line is that in this climate, the only safe bet is the one you do not make.










