The stock of democratic credibility in Kampala just took a nosedive. General Muhoozi Kainerugaba, Uganda’s army chief and son of the long-serving president, has ordered the shutdown of multiple media outlets. For those of us who track the risk premium on authoritarian governance, this is a clear signal: the cost of doing business in Uganda is about to rise.
Press freedom is not a luxury. It is the lubricant of accountable governance. When a general can unilaterally pull the plug on broadcasters, the market for ideas collapses. Investors hate uncertainty. And nothing screams instability quite like a man in uniform silencing journalists.
The Commonwealth, that dwindling club of former empire members, now faces a test of its relevance. Its charter trumpets democracy and human rights. But words are cheap. The real question is whether member states will impose tangible costs on Uganda. Sanctions, diplomatic isolation, suspension from the bloc: these are the tools of fiscal discipline. Will they be deployed?
Let’s be clear. This is not just a moral outrage. It is a bad economic signal. Capital flight thrives on censorship. If you cannot trust the news, you cannot trust the market. Foreign direct investment will pause. The Ugandan shilling will feel the pressure. Gilt yields in the region will attract a risk premium.
The Commonwealth must act. Not with a strongly worded statement. With teeth. If it does not, it signals to every tin-pot autocrat that press freedom is optional. And that is a liability no portfolio should hold. As a financial editor, I advise: hedge against Uganda. The fundamentals just deteriorated.
Central banks and finance ministers in the region should take note. When a general shuts down media, he also shuts down the possibility of transparent economic policy. The market will price that risk. It always does.









