Every governance event classified by the Civica Pulse Beta pipeline. Updated daily.
The Civica Pulse Beta is a real-time governance shock monitor under active validation. Events queued for human review (severe and catastrophic severity tiers, plus events where the classifier didn't reach consensus) do not drive published Pulse scores until a reviewer confirms them. See the Pulse methodology for the full pipeline.
On April 15, 2026, Uganda's Internal Affairs State Minister David Muhoozi introduced the Protection of Sovereignty Bill before parliament, which would criminalize vaguely defined activities promoting "interests of a foreigner against the interests of Uganda." The bill threatens fundamental rights to free expression and peaceful assembly by potentially allowing the government to restrict civil society organizations and political activity under the guise of protecting national sovereignty. The legislation is part of a broader pattern of government actions targeting political opponents, critics, and civil society actors.
AI summary · Claude Haiku
Source description (2 paragraphs)
Ugandan lawmakers arrive at the parliament, in Kampala, Uganda September 21, 2017.
(Nairobi) – A bill before Uganda’s parliament that proposes sweeping controls over “foreign funding” and political activity threatens fundamental rights and could be used to shut down civil society, Human Rights Watch said today. The bill emulates laws adopted in recent years by other rights-abusing governments, which have been deemed to violate international law.
On April 15, 2026, Internal Affairs State Minister David Muhoozi introduced the Protection of Sovereignty Bill of 2026 before parliament for its first reading. The bill proposes criminalizing vaguely defined activities that promote the “interests of a foreigner against the interests of Uganda.” The bill is part of a broader campaign by the Ugandan government to clamp down on free expression and peaceful assembly, that has included arresting and bringing criminal charges against political opponents and their supporters, as well as other critics of government officials.
“The Protection of Sovereignty Bill is the latest example of the government’s efforts to stifle dissent and inhibit political or social organizing and participation,” said Oryem Nyeko, senior Africa researcher at Human Rights Watch. “The proposed bi
The Ugandan Sovereignty Bill proposes sweeping legal restrictions on foreign-funded civil society and political activity, constituting a de jure restriction on NGOs and civil society organizations, though it is still at the bill/first-reading stage rather than enacted law.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
NGO / civil society restriction (de jure)
Rights & FreedomsModerate − · -4
The Ugandan Protection of Sovereignty Bill proposes sweeping controls over foreign funding and political activity that HRW assesses would shut down civil society and restrict free expression and assembly, fitting the de jure NGO/civil society restriction category.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
NGO / civil society restriction (de jure)
Rights & FreedomsModerate − · -4
The Ugandan Protection of Sovereignty Bill proposes sweeping restrictions on foreign funding and political activity that would effectively shut down civil society organizations and restrict assembly rights, fitting the de jure NGO/civil society restriction category.