KAMPALA — On a routine day before Parliament, Uganda’s digital future was laid out not as a distant ambition, but as a system already taking shape, layer by layer, policy by policy.
Appearing before the Parliamentary Committee on ICT on April 2, officials from the Ministry of ICT and National Guidance presented their Ministerial Policy Statement for the 2026/2027 financial year. On paper, it was a familiar exercise. In substance, it revealed something more ambitious: a coordinated attempt to turn digital transformation into the backbone of Uganda’s economic strategy.
At the centre of that vision is a simple idea, that technology is no longer a supporting sector, but the infrastructure through which everything else must function.
Hon. Kabbyanga Godfrey Baluku, the State Minister for ICT, framed it in strategic terms. “We highlighted key programme priorities that will drive Uganda’s digital transformation agenda,” he said, pointing to plans anchored in the Fourth National Development Plan, the Tenfold Growth Strategy, and the NRM Manifesto.
Those priorities are wide-ranging but tightly connected.
Government services are set to move further online, with a push for full automation across agencies aimed at improving efficiency and delivery. At the same time, the expansion of the National Backbone Infrastructure, and crucially, last-mile connectivity, seeks to close the gap between urban access and rural exclusion.
It is a familiar challenge. Digital systems can only transform lives if people can reach them.
But access alone is not enough.
Officials stressed the need to scale up digital literacy, recognising that connectivity without skills risks deepening inequality rather than reducing it. Alongside this, the government plans to promote local innovation, strengthen cybersecurity, and enforce the Data Protection and Privacy Act, measures designed not just to expand the digital economy, but to make it trustworthy.
“These interventions are critical in positioning ICT as a key enabler for socio-economic transformation and inclusive growth,” Kabbyanga said.
Yet even as the policy framework takes shape, a quieter conversation is unfolding about how to make it work at scale.
On the same day, Permanent Secretary Dr. Aminah Zawedde met officials from the British High Commission under the UK’s Digital Access Programme. The discussion focused on a problem that sits at the heart of Uganda’s ambitions: how to move from fragmented training initiatives to systems capable of reaching millions.
The answer, increasingly, points toward new models.
The meeting explored the potential of AI-enabled learning, approaches that could deliver training at scale, even in areas with limited connectivity. It also highlighted plans to develop a national digital skills curriculum aligned with Uganda’s broader development priorities.
For Zawedde, the emphasis was on coherence.
Uganda’s digital agenda, she noted, is not a collection of isolated projects but a structured framework, one that integrates infrastructure, skills, cybersecurity, and innovation into a single system designed to produce “meaningful and inclusive impact.”
That integration may prove to be the hardest part.
Across many countries, digital transformation has stalled not because of a lack of ideas, but because of fragmentation, programmes that operate in silos, technologies that fail to connect, and policies that outpace implementation.
Uganda’s approach appears to be an attempt to avoid that trap.
By linking infrastructure expansion with skills development, and pairing innovation with regulation, the government is trying to build a system that can sustain itself rather than depend on isolated interventions.
The ambition is clear. So are the risks.
Scaling digital services across government requires not just technology, but coordination across institutions that often operate independently. Expanding connectivity demands sustained investment. And building digital trust, through cybersecurity and data protection, depends on consistent enforcement, not just legislation.
For now, the strategy is still unfolding.
But as officials left Parliament and moved into discussions with international partners, one thing became apparent: Uganda’s digital transformation is no longer a question of whether, it is a question of how, and how quickly, it can be made to work.
