In a move that has rattled the already fragile investor confidence in East Africa, Ugandan authorities have charged a prominent lawyer with treason. The individual, whose identity remains under legal seal, is alleged to have conspired against the state. Britain, through its Foreign Office, has issued a stern call for a fair trial, invoking the shared legal traditions of the Commonwealth. Yet for those of us who watch the markets, this is less about jurisprudence and more about capital flight.
The charge sheet, if the rumours are true, reads like a bad novel. Treason in Uganda carries a maximum penalty of death, though executions are rare. The lawyer is said to have communicated with exiled opposition figures. The government, led by President Yoweri Museveni, has a long history of using the judiciary as a cudgel against dissent. The International Bar Association has expressed alarm. But the real story is the cost.
Gilt yields in London barely twitched. The FTSE 100 shrugged. Why? Because Uganda is not a significant player in global bond markets. Its external debt is manageable, around $19 billion, and its GDP growth has been steady at 4-5 per cent. But the signal is worrying. Foreign direct investment into Uganda has been sluggish since the 2021 elections. The World Bank’s ease of doing business index places it at 116th globally. A treason trial does not improve that ranking.
The British demand for a fair trial is correct in principle but naive in practice. Britain has limited leverage. It provides about £100 million in aid annually, a drop in the ocean of Uganda’s $11 billion budget. Museveni has become adept at playing great powers off against each other. China lends without asking about human rights. Russia offers military hardware. The EU frets about democracy but buys Ugandan coffee.
For investors, the risk is not the trial itself but the precedent. If the government can silence a lawyer with treason charges, what stops it from targeting a mining executive? Uganda holds vast reserves of copper, cobalt, and gold. The oil sector, with TotalEnergies and CNOOC drilling in the Lake Albert basin, is a $20 billion bet on stability. The final investment decision for the East African Crude Oil Pipeline, already delayed, now faces new headwinds.
The central bank will watch the shilling. It has depreciated 8 per cent against the dollar this year. Inflation is at 7 per cent, above the target. The monetary policy committee meets next week. They may raise rates to defend the currency. That would choke credit and slow growth.
Britain’s call for a fair trial is therefore not just about justice. It is about maintaining the rule of law as a foundation for economic activity. The Commonwealth is a club of 56 nations bound by shared legal norms. If Uganda flouts those norms, it damages the brand. That hurts British investment more than any single trial.
The bottom line: this is a storm in a teacup for global markets, but a hurricane for Uganda. The lawyer’s fate will be watched by international investors as a gauge of legal risk. Britain can demand all it wants; the real leverage is in the hands of bond vigilantes and currency speculators. They will deliver their verdict long before the courts.










