KAMPALA — On the surface, Uganda’s latest crime figures tell a reassuring story. Reported cases have fallen sharply, dropping by 10.2 percent from 218,715 in 2024 to 196,405 in 2025. For policymakers, it’s a sign that reforms—community policing, digital systems, and intelligence-led operations—are beginning to take hold.
But look closer, and the picture becomes more complicated.
The decline in crime, the Uganda Police Force Annual Crime Report 2025 suggests, is not matched by a similar improvement in justice delivery. Instead, it has exposed a system struggling to keep pace with its own progress.
Of the 79,291 cases taken to court, only 31,732 resulted in convictions—about 40 percent. Behind those numbers lies a deeper strain: a backlog of 123,058 cases accumulated over two years.
The causes are familiar but persistent—limited investigative capacity, underfunding, delays in forensic processing, and the difficulty of securing witnesses. Yet the most telling figure may be the simplest: one detective for every 54 cases, far from the UN-recommended ratio of one to 12.
That imbalance reveals something fundamental. Uganda’s policing system has become better at detecting and recording crime—but the institutions responsible for resolving those cases have not scaled at the same pace. In effect, success in policing is creating pressure elsewhere.
The composition of crime reinforces this tension.
Theft remains the most common offence, with 56,360 cases, followed by assault at 28,366. Sex-related offences and domestic violence account for more than 24,000 cases combined. These are not crimes driven by complex syndicates or high-level conspiracies. They are rooted in everyday social and economic realities—poverty, inequality, and domestic instability.
At the same time, new threats are emerging.
Cybercrime, organised networks, and land-related disputes are adding layers of complexity to an already stretched system. The result is a dual burden: policing must remain grounded in communities while also adapting to more sophisticated forms of criminality.
One of the quieter but more significant reforms has been the Sub-County Policing Model, now rolled out in 72 percent of regions. More than 406,000 citizens have been engaged in community initiatives—a shift toward participatory security that prioritises local intelligence and trust-building.
This may prove to be the system’s most important long-term investment.
Yet even here, a question lingers. Can community-based policing sustain gains if the broader justice system remains congested?
The report hints at a deeper transition underway. Policing is no longer just about reducing crime. It is about managing an increasingly complex system—balancing case flows, coordinating institutions, and maintaining public trust.
The risk is not failure, but imbalance.
Uganda’s crime rate may be falling. But unless investigative capacity, court efficiency, and resource allocation catch up, the system could find itself overwhelmed by its own progress.
