KAMPALA – At a recent launch in Kampala, officials from Uganda’s Ministry of ICT and National Guidance gathered not to announce a new app or lay a fibre-optic cable, but to make a quieter, and potentially more consequential promise: to be held to account.
The ministry formally launched its Client Service Charter for the period 2025/26 to 2029/30, a document that sets out what citizens should expect when they interact with the government on digital services, communication, cybersecurity, and national guidance. In simple terms, the Charter is a public contract, one that spells out what services the ministry will provide, how long they should take, and what citizens can do when those standards are not met.
For a country racing to digitise public services, the Charter marks a shift from ambition to accountability.
“This Client Service Charter is a deliberate decision by the Ministry to be measured and held accountable,” said Dr Aminah Zawedde, the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry, at the launch. “We are moving beyond infrastructure development to focus on the quality, timeliness, and impact of the services we deliver.”
For years, Uganda’s digital transformation has been defined by big-ticket projects: broadband rollout, e-government platforms, and national data systems. The Charter signals a different phase, one that asks not just whether systems exist, but whether they actually work for citizens.
Dr Zawedde said the Charter commits the ministry to clear service timelines, stronger feedback channels, and monitoring systems that track performance, not just policy intentions. “The success of this Charter will be judged by real improvements in service delivery and the lives of citizens,” she said.
The launch was officiated by Jane Kyarisiima Mwesiga, the Deputy Head of the Public Service, who underscored that the document’s value lies in what happens after the speeches end.
“The true value of a Client Service Charter lies not in its launch, but in its implementation,” she said. “Citizens must see visible improvements in how services are delivered.”
She described the Charter as part of a broader effort to professionalise public service, strengthen transparency, and rebuild trust between government and the public. “This Charter strengthens transparency, promotes professionalism, and reinforces trust,” she said, adding that her office would support the ministry through capacity building, innovation, and oversight to ensure the promises translate into results.
The Charter outlines the ministry’s commitments across a wide range of areas, including ICT infrastructure, digital public services, cybersecurity, data protection, innovation, communication, and national guidance. It also spells out citizens’ rights and responsibilities, how to access services, and where to take complaints when things go wrong.
Notably, the document will be shared primarily online, through the ministry’s website and social media platforms, reflecting the government’s digital-first approach and its push for more environmentally sustainable communication.
On paper, a client charter is not a revolution. But in a public service often criticised for delays, unclear processes, and weak accountability, it represents something quietly powerful: a benchmark against which citizens can measure performance.
Whether that promise holds will depend on what happens next—how complaints are handled, whether timelines are respected, and whether officials treat the Charter not as a formality, but as a commitment.
For now, the message from the ICT ministry is clear. In Uganda’s digital future, citizens are no longer just users of government systems. They are clients, and the ministry says it is ready to be judged as one.
