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IP Litigation Lawyers Uganda 2026: Copyright Amendments, Broadcasting Rights & Injunctions

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Uganda’s Copyright and Neighbouring Rights (Amendment) Act 2026, passed by Parliament in March 2026, has fundamentally reshaped the enforcement landscape for broadcasters, performers, sports federations and every other category of rights-holder operating in the country. For IP litigation lawyers Uganda now represents one of the most dynamic practice environments in East Africa, with expanded neighbouring rights, significantly higher statutory royalties, steeper criminal penalties and new registration obligations all demanding immediate attention. This guide delivers the practical litigation playbook that rights-holders and in-house counsel need: how to secure interim injunctions, quantify damages, navigate criminal exposure, and protect broadcasting rights Uganda stakeholders have invested heavily to acquire.

Immediate Actions for Rights-Holders

  • Register neighbouring rights. File updated applications with the Uganda Registration Services Bureau (URSB) to capture the expanded categories of protection now available under the 2026 amendments.
  • Preserve evidence. Begin archiving broadcast logs, streaming records, licence agreements and platform analytics, these form the foundation of any injunction application or damages claim.
  • Serve formal notice on infringers. A well-drafted cease-and-desist letter, referencing the new penalty provisions, often accelerates settlement and demonstrates good faith to the court.
  • Seek interim relief where infringement is ongoing. The Commercial Division of the High Court can grant ex parte injunctions within days when supported by proper affidavit evidence.
  • Notify platform partners and distributors. Ensure all sublicensees, aggregators and digital platform operators are aware of the new compliance obligations.
  • Engage experienced IP litigation counsel. The 2026 amendments introduce procedural nuances that require specialist guidance, delays in enforcement can erode the value of the underlying rights.

What Changed in the Copyright and Neighbouring Rights Act 2026, Plain-Language Breakdown

Key Legislative Changes

The Copyright and Neighbouring Rights (Amendment) Act 2026 amends the principal Copyright and Neighbouring Rights Act (Cap 215) in several material ways. The most consequential changes expand the definition and scope of neighbouring rights, making it clear that digital transmissions, including internet streaming and on-demand broadcasts, fall squarely within the protection framework. This closes a gap that had allowed unlicensed platforms to retransmit live sports events and music performances without consequence.

Statutory royalties have been revised upward. The Amendment introduces a more prescriptive royalty-setting mechanism that references market-rate benchmarks, giving rights-holders a stronger negotiating position and, critically, a clearer evidentiary basis when litigating unpaid royalties. Criminal penalties for wilful infringement have also been increased, with higher fines and the possibility of custodial sentences for repeat or commercial-scale offenders. These criminal penalties copyright Uganda courts can now impose make enforcement a genuinely dual-track proposition, civil remedies and criminal prosecution can run in parallel.

Who Is Newly Protected

The Amendment benefits three primary groups. Performers now enjoy express protection for live and recorded performances distributed digitally, not merely through traditional broadcast. Broadcasters, whether operating linear television, satellite, or streaming services, receive strengthened signal protection and clearer rights over retransmission. Producers of sound recordings and audiovisual works gain enhanced control over digital reproduction and distribution. Neighbouring rights registration Uganda stakeholders must now complete is available through the updated URSB portal and is a prerequisite for enforcing the new provisions.

Effective Dates and Regulator Actions

The timeline below captures the key milestones every affected stakeholder should note.

Date Event Practical Impact
March 2026 Amendment Act passed by Parliament Expanded neighbouring rights and increased penalties become law upon assent
April 2026 Presidential assent and gazette publication New criminal penalties enforceable; broadcasters must review and adjust existing licences
April–May 2026 URSB issues updated registration guidance and revised forms Rights-holders should file or update neighbouring rights registrations immediately

Who Is Affected, Practical Stakeholder Breakdown

Broadcasters: Linear, Satellite and Streaming

Broadcasters face the most immediate compliance burden. Every entity transmitting copyrighted content in Uganda, whether via terrestrial signal, satellite downlink or internet stream, must now hold a valid licence that reflects the expanded neighbouring rights. Failure to update licensing arrangements exposes broadcasters to both civil injunctions and criminal prosecution. The Uganda Communications Commission (UCC) is expected to align its broadcasting licence conditions with the new statutory framework, meaning that regulatory and copyright compliance obligations will increasingly overlap. Broadcasters should audit their entire content library and retransmission arrangements within the first 30 days.

Sports Federations and Event Organisers

Sports broadcasting disputes are likely to increase in frequency and complexity. Federations that sell exclusive broadcast rights must ensure their contracts address digital retransmission, territorial sublicensing and the allocation of neighbouring rights. Event organisers who have historically relied on informal arrangements now face a statutory regime that requires explicit rights allocation. Where exclusive deals are in place, federations should confirm that their broadcast partners have registered the corresponding neighbouring rights, otherwise enforcement against third-party infringers becomes significantly harder.

Performers, Producers and Collection Societies

Individual performers and producers stand to benefit most from the royalty increases, but only if they register. Collection societies operating in Uganda must update their distribution models to reflect the new statutory rates and the expanded categories of protected use. Performers who have not previously registered neighbouring rights should do so immediately through URSB to ensure they are captured in royalty collection and distribution cycles.

Entity Registration / Obligations Common Remedies (Civil & Interim)
Broadcasters Register neighbouring rights; maintain broadcast logs; update licence agreements Injunctions, statutory royalties, compensatory and exemplary damages
Sports federations Contractually assign broadcast rights with digital-retransmission clauses; register where applicable Breach of contract claims, interim injunctions, account of profits
Performers / producers Register neighbouring rights via URSB; join or engage a collection society Royalty claims, criminal complaint for intentional infringement, damages

Injunctions Copyright Uganda: Interim Relief and the Practical Litigation Playbook

For rights-holders facing active infringement, securing an interim injunction is almost always the first and most critical step. The 2026 amendments do not introduce a new injunction regime, but they significantly strengthen the substantive rights that underpin applications for injunctions copyright Uganda courts are asked to grant. The expanded definitions and clearer statutory language make it easier to satisfy the threshold legal tests.

Jurisdiction and Forum, Where to File

In Uganda, copyright and neighbouring rights disputes are typically filed in the High Court (Commercial Division) in Kampala, which has developed considerable experience with IP matters. The Commercial Division’s practice directions permit expedited hearing of applications for temporary injunctions, making it the preferred forum for urgent relief. Where the infringement involves a broadcasting licence issued under the Uganda Communications Act, there may be parallel jurisdiction before the UCC, although judicial remedies remain the primary enforcement channel. Rights-holders outside Kampala can file in the nearest High Court circuit, but the Commercial Division’s specialist experience generally makes it the stronger choice.

Evidence Pack Checklist

A successful injunction application depends on the quality and completeness of the supporting evidence. IP litigation lawyers Uganda practitioners recommend assembling the following before filing:

  • Broadcast logs and streaming records. Timestamped recordings or platform analytics showing the infringing transmission, including URLs, IP addresses and screenshots.
  • Licence agreements. Copies of the applicant’s own licence or assignment agreements proving ownership or exclusive licensee status.
  • URSB registration certificates. Current neighbouring rights registration confirming the applicant’s standing.
  • Chain-of-custody documentation. Affidavit from the person who captured or preserved the evidence, confirming it has not been tampered with.
  • Witness statements. From technical staff, content managers or investigators who can attest to the nature and scale of the infringement.
  • Market valuation evidence. Licence fee comparables or expert opinion on the value of the rights being infringed, this supports the “irreparable harm” element.

Draft Affidavit and Sample Urgent Relief Wording

The affidavit in support of a temporary injunction must establish three elements under Ugandan procedural law: a prima facie case with a probability of success, a likelihood of irreparable injury that cannot be adequately compensated by damages, and, on the balance of convenience, that greater hardship would result from refusing the injunction than from granting it.

A well-structured affidavit should open by identifying the applicant’s rights (referencing URSB registration and the relevant provisions of the Copyright and Neighbouring Rights Act as amended in 2026), then describe the infringing conduct with specificity (dates, platforms, content), and conclude with a statement of irreparable harm, typically the ongoing erosion of exclusive rights and the inability to recall digital content once disseminated. The prayer should request an order restraining the respondent from further transmission, reproduction or distribution of the specified content, pending the hearing of the main suit.

Where the matter is ex parte, the applicant must also demonstrate urgency and explain why notice to the respondent is impracticable, for example, because the infringer could destroy evidence or relocate streaming infrastructure offshore. Industry observers expect courts to be receptive to ex parte applications in broadcasting cases given the ephemeral nature of live transmissions.

Enforcing Orders Against Streaming Platforms and Cross-Border Hosts

Enforcement against offshore platforms remains one of the most challenging aspects of IP litigation in Uganda. Where the infringing stream originates from servers outside the jurisdiction, rights-holders should consider serving the injunction order on local internet service providers (ISPs) and requesting site-blocking or traffic-filtering measures. The UCC has powers to direct licensed ISPs to comply with court orders affecting content transmitted within Uganda. For platforms with no local presence, cross-border IP enforcement strategies, including DMCA-style takedown requests, registrar complaints and coordination with foreign regulators, should be pursued in parallel.

Calculating Damages, Royalties and Licensing Uganda Stakeholders Should Understand

Once liability is established, or during settlement negotiations, the critical question becomes quantum. The 2026 amendments materially affect how royalties and licensing Uganda rights-holders negotiate, because the new statutory royalty framework provides a higher baseline and the expanded neighbouring rights create additional revenue streams that must be valued.

Model Approaches to Proving Royalties

Ugandan courts have accepted several methods for quantifying copyright and neighbouring rights damages. The choice of method depends on the nature of the infringement and the available evidence.

Method When Used Practical Evidence Needed
Market-rate licence fee Where a comparable licence exists or the rights-holder can demonstrate standard industry rates Executed licence agreements for similar content, territory and duration; industry rate cards; expert testimony on market norms
Per-view / per-subscriber calculation Streaming and pay-TV infringement where viewership or subscriber data is available Platform analytics, ISP traffic data, subscriber records (obtained via discovery or accounting orders)
Lost sublicensing revenue Where the infringement has undermined the rights-holder’s ability to sublicense to third parties Evidence of lost deals, correspondence with prospective sublicensees, valuation of exclusivity premium
Account of profits Where the infringer has profited from the infringing use (advertising revenue, subscriptions) Court-ordered accounting; financial records of the infringer; forensic audit reports
Statutory damages / exemplary damages Where actual loss is difficult to quantify or the infringement is wilful Evidence of wilfulness, scale of infringement, deterrence arguments

Using Expert Evidence and Accounting Orders

In complex broadcasting disputes, expert evidence from economists, media valuation specialists or forensic accountants is often essential. Courts can be asked to appoint independent experts or to order the defendant to produce financial records through an accounting order. The early practical effect of the 2026 amendments will be to strengthen applications for accounting orders, because the expanded statutory framework makes it easier to establish a prima facie entitlement to royalties. Rights-holders should identify and instruct expert witnesses early, ideally before filing the main suit, to ensure that valuation evidence is ready for interlocutory hearings.

Settlement vs Litigation, Negotiation Checklist

Not every dispute needs to proceed to judgment. The threat of higher statutory penalties and criminal exposure under the 2026 amendments gives rights-holders significant leverage in settlement negotiations. When negotiating, rights-holders should insist on the following minimum terms:

  • Retrospective royalty payment. A lump-sum payment covering the period of unlicensed use, calculated using one of the methods above.
  • Prospective licence agreement. A formal licence with clear territorial scope, digital-retransmission rights, sublicensing restrictions and a royalty escalation clause tied to the new statutory framework.
  • Audit rights. The right to audit the licensee’s usage records and financial accounts at agreed intervals.
  • Termination and injunction consent. A clause permitting the licensor to seek injunctive relief without further notice if the licensee breaches material terms.
  • Neighbouring rights acknowledgment. Express recognition of the licensor’s neighbouring rights registration and an undertaking not to challenge it.

Criminal Enforcement and Defending Criminal Charges

The criminal penalties copyright Uganda authorities can now impose under the 2026 amendments represent a substantial escalation. Wilful infringement on a commercial scale, including unauthorised retransmission of broadcast signals and large-scale digital piracy, now attracts higher fines and the realistic prospect of custodial sentences. The URSB, working with the Uganda Police Force, has the authority to initiate investigations and refer cases for prosecution.

For rights-holders, the criminal track offers a powerful enforcement tool, particularly against repeat infringers or piracy operations that are difficult to reach through civil proceedings alone. A criminal complaint can be filed with the URSB or directly with the police, supported by the same evidence package used for civil injunctions. The likely practical effect will be that the mere filing of a criminal complaint accelerates civil settlement discussions.

For defendants, the interaction between civil and criminal proceedings creates additional risk. Statements made in criminal proceedings can be used in parallel civil claims, and vice versa. Defence strategies should focus on challenging the element of wilfulness, demonstrating reliance on a licence or authorisation, or establishing that the allegedly infringing use falls within a statutory exception. Where both tracks are running simultaneously, coordination between criminal defence counsel and the civil litigation team is essential to avoid inconsistent positions.

Sports Broadcasting Disputes, Negotiation and Dispute-Avoidance Checklist

The sports sector is where the 2026 amendments are likely to generate the most commercially significant disputes. Live sports broadcasting rights in Uganda have grown rapidly in value, driven by continental football competitions, cricket, rugby and athletics events. The expanded neighbouring rights regime means that federations, event organisers and their broadcast partners must now address digital retransmission, territorial exclusivity and sublicensing with far greater contractual precision.

Consider a scenario that industry observers expect to become common: a sports federation grants exclusive linear broadcast rights to one broadcaster, but a third party captures and retransmits the live feed via an unlicensed streaming platform. Under the pre-amendment law, the federation’s remedies were limited and the path to injunctive relief was uncertain. Under the 2026 Act, the federation (or its exclusive licensee) can now apply for an interim injunction on an expedited basis, file a criminal complaint for commercial-scale wilful infringement, and claim damages calculated using the enhanced statutory royalty framework. The combination of civil and criminal pressure makes unlicensed retransmission a far riskier proposition.

Quick Negotiation Checklist and Template Key Clauses

When structuring or renegotiating sports broadcast deals after the 2026 amendments, federations and broadcasters should ensure their agreements include:

  • Digital retransmission clause. Explicitly define whether the licence covers internet streaming, mobile distribution and on-demand replay, and at what additional royalty rate.
  • Territorial exclusivity with sublicensing controls. Specify the geographic scope and require prior written consent for any sublicensing.
  • Neighbouring rights registration obligation. Require the licensee to register the neighbouring rights with URSB within a defined period and provide proof of registration.
  • Force majeure tailored to broadcast interruption. Address scenarios such as government-imposed blackouts, signal interference or platform takedowns.
  • Injunction consent and cooperation clause. Require the licensee to cooperate in enforcement actions against third-party infringers, including providing evidence and joining injunction applications as a co-applicant where necessary.
  • Royalty escalation mechanism. Link royalty rates to the statutory framework, with periodic review to capture any future amendments.

IP Litigation Lawyers Uganda, Immediate Practical Checklist

The following timeline provides a structured approach for broadcasters, rights-holders and sports bodies responding to the 2026 amendments.

First 30 days:

  • File or update neighbouring rights registrations with URSB.
  • Audit all existing licence and sublicensing agreements for compliance with the expanded statutory requirements.
  • Preserve and archive all broadcast logs, streaming data and platform analytics for the preceding 12 months.
  • Issue cease-and-desist notices to known infringers, referencing the new penalty provisions.

First 90 days:

  • Renegotiate or amend licence agreements to include digital retransmission, neighbouring rights acknowledgment and royalty escalation clauses.
  • Instruct IP litigation counsel to prepare template injunction applications and evidence packs.
  • Notify platform partners, distributors and ISPs of the new compliance framework and their obligations under court orders.

First 180 days:

  • Conduct a full royalty audit, identify underpayments, unlicensed uses and potential claims.
  • Engage expert witnesses (economists, forensic accountants) for any anticipated litigation.
  • Review and update internal compliance policies, including staff training on the amended law and evidence-preservation protocols.
  • Evaluate whether criminal complaints should be filed against persistent or commercial-scale infringers.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Frederick J. Mpanga at AF Mpanga, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Uganda Registration Services Bureau (URSB)
  2. Parliament of Uganda
  3. Uganda Judiciary
  4. MMAKS Advocates, Intellectual Property
  5. Kampala Associated Advocates (KAA), Intellectual Property
  6. DLA Piper Africa, IP & Technology (Uganda)
  7. Lawzana, IP Litigation Lawyers Uganda
  8. Uganda Communications Commission (UCC)
  9. Uganda Legal Information Institute (ULII)

FAQs

What does the Copyright and Neighbouring Rights Act 2026 change for broadcasters in Uganda?
The Amendment expands neighbouring rights to expressly cover digital transmissions, increases statutory royalty rates, and imposes higher criminal penalties for wilful infringement. Broadcasters must update their licence agreements and register neighbouring rights with URSB to remain compliant.
Rights-holders file an application in the Commercial Division of the High Court, supported by an affidavit demonstrating a prima facie case, irreparable harm and the balance of convenience. Ex parte applications are available where urgency is established.
Yes. The Amendment introduces a market-rate royalty benchmark and expands the categories of protected use. Broadcasters with existing licence agreements should renegotiate to reflect the new statutory baseline or face claims for underpayment.
Yes. Wilful commercial-scale infringement, including unauthorised retransmission and digital piracy, attracts increased fines and potential custodial sentences. The URSB and Uganda Police Force can investigate and refer cases for prosecution.
Federations should review all broadcast agreements for digital-retransmission coverage, ensure exclusive licensees have registered neighbouring rights, update contract templates with the clauses described in this guide, and engage IP litigation counsel for enforcement planning.
An ex parte interim injunction in the Commercial Division can be obtained within days of filing, provided the affidavit evidence is complete. An inter partes hearing is typically scheduled within 14–21 days. Timelines depend on the court’s schedule and the complexity of the dispute.
The URSB administers the neighbouring rights registration system. Registration is completed by filing an application with supporting documentation through the URSB portal. Enforcement is pursued through the courts (civil and criminal) and, for broadcasting-specific matters, may involve the Uganda Communications Commission.

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IP Litigation Lawyers Uganda 2026: Copyright Amendments, Broadcasting Rights & Injunctions

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