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HOW SOME AFRICAN COUNTRIES CONQUERED THE CONTINENT THROUGH MUSIC — AND THE LESSONS THE REST OF AFRICA MUST LEARN

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Few things unite Africa more powerfully than music.

Long before social media connected the continent digitally, African music had already crossed borders emotionally. Songs travelled through radio waves, cassette tapes, dance halls, weddings, buses, bars, clubs, television stations, concerts, and word of mouth. Entire generations grew up dancing to languages they did not understand, yet somehow emotionally connected to deeply.

That is the power of music.

And throughout modern African history, certain countries managed to dominate the continent musically in ways that transformed not only entertainment, but culture, influence, identity, and even economics.

The interesting question is:
Why did some African countries succeed so massively in music beyond their borders while others struggled to export their sound continentally?

The answer has very little to do with talent alone.

Because if there is one thing Africa has never lacked, it is musical talent.

From East Africa to West Africa, from Southern Africa to North Africa, virtually every African country possesses extraordinary musical ability rooted in rich cultural traditions, rhythm, storytelling, spirituality, dance, language, and emotional expression. Every part of the continent carries unique sonic identities shaped by centuries of heritage and community life.

Yet despite this abundance of talent, only a few countries consistently transformed their local sounds into continental and global cultural dominance.

And they did not achieve it accidentally.

One of the earliest and most influential examples was the rise of Congolese music.

For decades, the sounds emerging from the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Republic of the Congo conquered African airwaves almost completely. Congolese Rumba and Soukous became more than genres, they became continental cultural movements.

Artists such as Papa Wemba, Koffi Olomidé, Awilo Longomba, Tshala Muana and many others achieved levels of African influence that were extraordinary for their time.

Their music dominated clubs, weddings, concerts, radio stations, and social gatherings across the continent.

In countries like Uganda, audiences passionately sang along to Lingala lyrics they barely understood. Congolese artists filled concert venues repeatedly. Their choreography, fashion, instrumentation, rhythm structures, and performance culture became aspirational across multiple African markets.

That level of influence represented something far bigger than entertainment.

It was cultural exportation.

At almost the same historical moment, South Africa was also building enormous continental musical influence through artists such as Yvonne Chaka Chaka and Lucky Dube.

South African music carried strong emotional, political, and cultural identity. Even beyond language barriers, the music communicated authenticity, struggle, pride, rhythm, spirituality, and identity in ways audiences across Africa deeply connected with.

Songs from South Africa became embedded into African social life.

At the time, it genuinely appeared as though Congolese and South African musicians possessed unmatched talent compared to the rest of the continent. But history would later prove that musical dominance had less to do with superior talent and more to do with strategic cultural positioning.

Years later, Nigeria would repeat this phenomenon on an even larger scale.

The rise of Nigerian music became one of the most important entertainment revolutions in modern African history. What made Nigeria’s success especially remarkable was that it occurred during a period when many African countries already had relatively developed entertainment industries and highly talented artists of their own.

Yet Nigerian music still managed to dominate.

Afrobeats evolved from being a local sound into a global commercial force. Nigerian artists became international ambassadors of African culture, performing on the world’s biggest stages and collaborating with global superstars.

But again, this success was not accidental.

Several patterns consistently appear whenever a country successfully exports music beyond its borders.

The first and perhaps most important factor is identity.

The countries that dominated African music never abandoned their uniqueness in pursuit of imitation. Instead, they amplified what made them culturally recognizable.

Congolese music maintained unmistakable Congolese choreography, guitar arrangements, vocal styling, rhythm progression, fashion aesthetics, and performance energy. South African music embraced strong Zulu cultural influence in dance, language, costume design, and rhythm structures. Nigerian music retained a uniquely Nigerian expression of English, slang, delivery, melody, storytelling, and energy.

Their music sounded unmistakably theirs.

And that mattered enormously.

Global audiences are rarely attracted to imitation. They are attracted to authenticity packaged confidently.

The countries that conquered African music leaned into their cultural identity instead of running away from it.

That remains one of the biggest lessons for emerging African music industries today.

Too many artists still believe international success requires abandoning local identity in order to sound Western, American, or foreign. Yet the countries that achieved the greatest global success did the exact opposite; they exported themselves unapologetically.

Identity became their competitive advantage.

The second lesson lies in emotional universality.

While language barriers existed, the emotions inside the music transcended language itself. Great melodies, strong instrumentation, compelling rhythm, emotional sincerity, and memorable performances allowed audiences to connect even without fully understanding lyrics.

Lucky Dube is one of the clearest examples of this phenomenon. His music addressed social injustice, poverty, freedom, struggle, spirituality, inequality, hope, and humanity in ways that resonated across cultures and borders.

The best African music movements always combined local identity with universal emotion.

That balance is powerful.

The third lesson is performance culture.

Congolese artists mastered stage performance and choreography.
South African artists mastered cultural theatricality and rhythm.
Nigerian artists mastered charisma, energy, branding, confidence, and modern entertainment packaging.

Music success was never just about audio alone.
It became an entire experience.

The most influential music industries understood that audiences consume not just songs, but personalities, aesthetics, fashion, dance, storytelling, visuals, movement, and emotion.

And finally, perhaps the most overlooked factor behind successful African music industries is professionalism.

Behind every major music movement are systems.

There are managers, promoters, marketers, producers, distributors, event organizers, media strategists, choreographers, investors, and entertainment entrepreneurs working together to build scalable industries.

Countries that exported music successfully usually developed stronger entertainment ecosystems around artists.

That ecosystem mentality matters enormously today.

The future of African music will not depend solely on talent. It will depend on infrastructure, investment, branding, digital distribution, streaming strategy, intellectual property protection, cross-border collaboration, media systems, and professional management.

Music is no longer just culture.
It is economics.
It is diplomacy.
It is tourism.
It is technology.
It is soft power.
It is export.
It is influence.

African countries that understand this early will dominate the next generation of global entertainment.

And perhaps the greatest lesson from all the continent’s most successful music movements is this:

The world pays closest attention to Africa when Africa sounds like itself. Not when it imitates others. But when it confidently exports its own rhythm, identity, soul, language, movement, energy, and story to the world. That is how musical empires are built.

The Village Chairman Who Can Finally Serve His Community After Sunset

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A #100DaysofSolar Human Impact Story from Kamengo, Mpigi District, Uganda

For 69-year-old Kiberu Miti Florencio, leadership has always meant service.

As village chairman in Kamengo, Mpigi District, people depend on him to guide the community through disputes, support vulnerable families, and help solve everyday challenges affecting the lives of those around him.

By day, Florencio was a trusted leader.

But before Solar M7 arrived, darkness took that power away every evening.

Once night fell, his ability to serve the village became severely limited. Important documents could not be written properly. Community issues that needed urgent attention often had to wait until morning. Elderly residents and vulnerable families remained exposed because responding effectively in darkness was difficult and unsafe.

For Florencio, the frustration felt deeply personal.

Because leadership does not stop when the sun goes down.

Yet darkness kept silencing his duty to the people he served.

Then Solar M7 arrived. And slowly, his ability to lead returned.

Today, reliable solar light fills his home after sunset, allowing him to continue community work safely into the evening. He now writes documents clearly, responds more confidently to village concerns, and supports elderly residents and families with greater effectiveness.

The light did more than brighten his home.

It reignited his purpose.

“Before Solar M7, darkness stopped much of the work I needed to do for the community,” Florencio shared during his interview. “Now I continue helping people at night, and I feel useful to my village again.”

According to Doreen Nanfuka, local leaders in underserved communities often struggle to fully support residents because of poor energy access.

“When leaders gain reliable light, entire communities benefit,” Doreen explained. “It improves communication, response, safety, and trust between leaders and the people they serve.”

Innocent Kawooya says stories like Florencio’s demonstrate how energy access strengthens grassroots leadership and community resilience.

“Reliable light empowers local leaders to continue serving people effectively after sunset,” he noted. “Stronger leadership creates stronger communities.”

Today, nights inside Florencio’s home no longer feel powerless.

Documents are written. Community matters are addressed. The elderly receive support. And in a village where darkness once silenced a chairman’s ability to serve, Solar M7 is now helping restore something deeply important.

Leadership. Responsibility. And the dignity of continuing to stand for the people at any hour.

Watch the full story of Kiberu Miti Florencio from Kamengo, Mpigi District, Uganda across our platforms:

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#100DaysofSolar #SolarM7 #IncludeEveryone #EnergyAccess #HumanImpact #Mpigi #Uganda #CleanEnergy #HiPipo

Banned from World Cup, Somali Referee Omar Artan Appointed to Officiate UEFA Super Cup

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Just days after being denied entry to the United States for the FIFA World Cup 2026, Somali referee Omar Artan has been appointed to officiate the UEFA Super Cup, European football’s governing body announced on 11th June.

The 34-year-old, named CAF Men’s Referee of the Year in 2025, will take charge of the match between UEFA Champions League winners Paris Saint-Germain and UEFA Europa League winners Aston Villa FC on 12th August in Salzburg, Austria.

The appointment follows discussions between UEFA and its African counterpart, CAF, under a recently signed Memorandum of Understanding aimed at encouraging cooperation in refereeing and other areas of football development.

Artan’s World Cup dream was shattered on Monday when he was denied entry at Miami International Airport despite holding a diplomatic passport and a valid US visa. A US official later claimed the Somali referee was denied entry due to “association with suspected members of terror organisations,” an allegation Artan has denied.

He was detained for 11 hours, questioned about links to Somali militant group Al Shabab, and put on a flight to Istanbul before returning to Mogadishu, where he received a hero’s welcome.

Now, just days later, UEFA has offered him a stage almost as prestigious as the World Cup.

“Omar Artan is an excellent young but already experienced referee, who has proven himself at the highest competition level of the Confederation of African Football,” said UEFA President Aleksander Čeferin.

“Football is made to connect people, and UEFA wants to show its respect to Omar and his outstanding officiating skills, which had earned him such a prestigious nomination. I am grateful to my friend, CAF President Patrice Motsepe, for supporting enthusiastically our initiative.”

CAF President Dr. Patrice Motsepe framed the appointment as a victory for African football.

“Omar Artan has made Somalia and the entire people of the African continent extremely proud,” Motsepe said. “His receipt of the CAF Men’s Referee of the Year Award 2025 and his appointment as a referee of the FIFA World Cup 2026 are a recognition of his world-class refereeing ability and the international respect that he enjoys.”

He added: “I am very thankful to my friend, Aleksander Čeferin, for enabling Omar Artan to officiate the UEFA Super Cup 2026 match. This is a great honour for Omar Artan and for African referees and is also an excellent example of football bringing together and uniting people from Africa and Europe and worldwide.”

Artan has been on the FIFA international list since 2018. Among the most notable matches he has officiated is the second leg of the 2025/26 CAF Champions League final. His performances earned him the CAF Men’s Referee of the Year Award in 2025, making him the first Somali referee to receive that honour.

The UEFA Super Cup appointment is a significant step up. While not the World Cup, the Super Cup remains a high-profile European fixture, contested by the winners of the continent’s two major club competitions. PSG and Aston Villa will meet in Salzburg on 12th August, with Artan at the centre of the action.

UEFA’s move is not purely charitable. The two confederations signed an MoU aimed at encouraging cooperation in refereeing, coaching, and other technical areas. Appointing an African referee to a major European final sends a signal that UEFA is serious about that partnership.

It also allows UEFA to make a quiet political point. While the United States barred Artan over alleged security concerns, European football has welcomed him with open arms. The contrast could not be starker.

For Artan, the appointment is both a professional lifeline and a personal vindication. He will not officiate at the World Cup, but he will stand in the centre of a European final, with millions watching.

Artan has not yet publicly commented on the UEFA Super Cup appointment. Following his return to Mogadishu earlier this week, he struck a defiant tone, promising to officiate at the 2030 World Cup and urging Somali youth not to lose hope.

“Everything is pre-destined,” he said at the airport. “Fifa supported me well and were in touch with me until I reached Mogadishu. I promise you that I’ll be officiating at the next World Cup.”

For now, Salzburg will do just fine.

Government Has Invested Sh11 Trillion in Wealth Creation Over Five Years, Says Finance Minister

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The Government of Uganda has invested close to Sh11 trillion in wealth creation programmes over the past five years, Finance Minister Henry Musasizi revealed on Thursday as he presented the 2026/27 national budget at Kololo Ceremonial Grounds.

The interventions, Musasizi said, target households, farmers, women, youth, and businesses by expanding access to affordable capital, strengthening enterprise development, and increasing household incomes. He described wealth creation as the foundation of economic transformation and praised President Yoweri Museveni’s leadership in empowering Ugandans.

Musasizi described the Parish Development Model (PDM) as the most important intervention for poverty eradication. Over the last five years, the government has transferred Sh4.4 trillion as revolving capital to 10,589 parishes across the country.

“By the end of June, the programme is expected to have reached more than four million beneficiaries,” Musasizi said. He added that the next phase of PDM will focus on improving productivity, value addition, and market access while ensuring underserved and densely populated urban parishes receive adequate funding.

The government also plans to gradually transform the programme into a self-sustaining financial ecosystem, ultimately evolving into a PDM Bank.

On Emyooga, the specialised enterprise development programme, Musasizi said the government has so far capitalised it with Sh760 billion in revolving funds.

The programme has established 7,148 Savings and Credit Cooperative Organisations (SACCOs) with more than 2.48 million members and cumulative savings of Sh95.3 billion. An additional Sh100 billion has been allocated for Emyooga in the 2026/27 financial year.

The government is currently piloting the Katale Loan Facility, administered through the Microfinance Support Centre in six major markets within the Kampala Metropolitan Area. The facility offers working capital loans at an annual interest rate of 8 percent and currently serves traders in St Balikuddembe (Owino), Nakawa, Kalerwe, Busega, Nakasero, and Ggaba markets.

Musasizi said the government plans to roll it out nationwide during the 2026/27 financial year.

The Small Business Fund, established in 2021 following the Covid-19 pandemic, has so far disbursed more than Sh82.1 billion to 4,031 small and medium enterprises. The facility offers loans of up to Sh500 million at a 10 percent interest rate.

The government has also invested Sh371.7 billion in the Agricultural Credit Facility, which has leveraged cumulative lending of Sh1.35 trillion to more than 14,000 beneficiaries. A further Sh47.68 billion has been allocated to the facility for the coming financial year.

For large-scale commercial farmers cultivating at least 50 acres of grains and animal feeds, Musasizi said the government paid Sh41 billion in interest subsidies during the current financial year, enabling 186 farmers to access Sh169.1 billion in credit. Another Sh41 billion has been set aside for the programme in 2026/27.

Through the Uganda Development Bank (UDB), one of the largest recipients of government capitalisation, Musasizi said the government has injected Sh1.6 trillion into the bank, bringing more than Sh2.45 trillion in financing to over 600 businesses operating in agriculture, manufacturing, tourism, construction, and services. In the 2026/27 financial year, the bank will receive an additional Sh442.2 billion.

Under the World Bank-financed GROW (Generating Opportunities for Women) project, Musasizi said Sh133.14 billion in soft loans has been extended to 6,584 women-owned businesses. This complements Sh153.5 billion previously disbursed under the Uganda Women Entrepreneurship Programme, which has benefited nearly 245,000 women.

For youth empowerment, the minister said the government has financed 24,859 projects benefiting 275,034 young people at a cost of Sh195.4 billion, while another 57,849 youths have benefited through the Youth Venture Capital Fund.

Another beneficiary group, according to Musasizi, is the creative sector. The government has established a Sh33 billion revolving fund for musicians and other creatives to support enterprise growth and job creation.

Private teachers’ unions received Sh20 billion to strengthen their SACCOs and improve access to affordable credit, on top of an earlier Sh25 billion extended to Walimu SACCO umbrella structures. A total of Sh2.49 trillion has been earmarked for teachers’ SACCOs in the next financial year.

The Sh11 trillion figure represents a significant portion of Uganda’s budget over five years, reflecting the government’s stated commitment to moving households from subsistence to the money economy. However, questions remain about the effectiveness of these programmes. While the minister presented impressive numbers on beneficiaries and disbursements, the budget speech did not include independent data on poverty reduction, household income growth, or loan repayment rates.

The government’s plan to eventually transform PDM into a self-sustaining bank suggests an awareness that long-term success depends on financial viability, not just capital injection. For now, the minister’s message was clear: the money has been spent, and millions of Ugandans have been reached. Whether that translates into lasting wealth creation will be the measure of the programmes’ true success.

“Consumers Trust and Prefer the Efficiency of Electronic Credit Transfers” — The Bank of Uganda Statement That Defines Uganda’s Digital Finance Success Story

When the Bank of Uganda announced that the volume of UGX transactions cleared through electronic credit transfers had increased from 87.71% to 93.53%, and that the value of those transactions had surged from 79.33% to 93.00%, it was reporting far more than financial statistics. It was documenting one of the most significant economic transformations in Uganda’s modern history. In the same statement, the Bank observed a sustained upward trajectory in both transaction volume and value, noting that consumers increasingly “trust and prefer the efficiency of electronic credit transfers.”

For many Ugandans, these numbers may appear technical. Yet behind them lies a remarkable national story, one shaped by policymakers, innovators, financial institutions, telecommunications companies, development partners, central banks, fintech entrepreneurs, and millions of ordinary citizens who have gradually embraced digital financial services as part of everyday life.

This is also a story that HiPipo has lived and contributed to for nearly two decades.

Long before digital payments became the dominant way to move money, HiPipo was advocating for a future in which financial services would be accessible to everyone, regardless of income level, location, gender, age, or social status. Through conferences, research, public awareness campaigns, media initiatives, policy dialogues, innovation platforms, and financial literacy programs, HiPipo consistently championed the belief that digital finance could become one of the greatest equalisers in Africa’s development journey.

Today, the Bank of Uganda’s numbers suggest that vision is becoming reality.

The shift from cash to digital payments did not happen because technology became available. It happened because trust was built. Every successful mobile money transaction, every electronic funds transfer, every interoperable payment, every digital merchant payment, and every successful financial literacy intervention contributed to changing consumer behaviour. Millions of Ugandans gradually discovered that digital payments were not merely convenient; they were faster, safer, more transparent, and often more affordable than traditional cash-based alternatives.

The Bank of Uganda’s findings demonstrate that electronic credit transfers have now solidified their position as the primary engine of transaction activity across Uganda’s payment ecosystem. This achievement places Uganda among Africa’s leading examples of how deliberate investment in digital financial infrastructure can transform an economy.

Few initiatives embody this transformation better than HiPipo’s Include Everyone Program. Over the years, the program has worked to ensure that digital financial services reach those who are most likely to be excluded from economic opportunities. Through financial literacy training, digital skills development, women’s economic empowerment initiatives, youth engagement programs, and regional partnerships, Include Everyone has consistently focused on one central idea: technology only matters when people can use it confidently and safely.

Across Uganda and the wider COMESA region, thousands of women, youth, entrepreneurs, cross-border traders, and community leaders have benefited from interventions designed to increase awareness of, trust in, and adoption of digital financial services. The objective has never been to increase transaction numbers. The objective has always been to create meaningful participation in the digital economy.

This philosophy closely aligns with the broader global financial inclusion movement championed by organisations such as the Gates Foundation. For years, the Foundation has supported efforts to make financial systems more inclusive, interoperable, and affordable. Through engagements around inclusive finance, digital public infrastructure, interoperability, and emerging payment systems, organisations like HiPipo have helped bring global financial inclusion conversations into African realities.

The growth reported by the Bank of Uganda is therefore not an isolated event. It is part of a much larger continental movement toward inclusive digital economies. Across Africa, central banks are increasingly investing in modern payment systems, interoperability frameworks, consumer protection mechanisms, and financial inclusion strategies. Uganda’s progress demonstrates what becomes possible when these efforts are sustained over many years.

The relationship between HiPipo and central banks across the continent has been built around this shared vision. Through platforms such as the Digital and Financial Inclusion Summit Africa, the MEA Digital Transformation Summit, and numerous policy and innovation engagements, HiPipo has consistently created opportunities for regulators, innovators, banks, FinTechs, mobile money operators, development partners, and consumers to collaborate around common goals. These conversations have helped strengthen understanding, encourage innovation, and promote the development of increasingly interconnected and inclusive financial ecosystems.

One of the most important drivers behind the growth in electronic transactions has been interoperability. For years, HiPipo has advocated that financial inclusion cannot be fully achieved if systems remain isolated from one another. Consumers derive the greatest value when money can move seamlessly between banks, mobile money wallets, merchants, governments, businesses, and individuals. The remarkable growth in electronic credit transfers reflects the increasing maturity of these digital rails and the growing confidence consumers have in using them.

The Bank of Uganda’s recent announcement regarding Over-the-Counter cash withdrawal limits, which will take effect in January 2027, further reinforces the direction of travel. Rather than signalling a restriction, the policy acknowledges a reality already reflected in transaction data: Uganda is becoming a predominantly digital payments economy. The Bank’s decision recognises that consumers are increasingly choosing electronic channels because they trust their efficiency, reliability, and convenience.

Behind every percentage point reported by the Bank of Uganda are millions of individual success stories. There is a market vendor receiving payments instantly. A small business owner is managing cash flow digitally. There is a farmer receiving money without travelling long distances. A student is paying fees electronically. An entrepreneur is accessing new markets through digital commerce. There is a cross-border trader conducting transactions with greater security and transparency. Together, these individual experiences form the foundation of Uganda’s digital economy.

The significance of the Bank of Uganda’s figures extends beyond payments. They represent trust. They represent inclusion. They represent opportunity. Most importantly, they represent progress.

As Uganda moves toward an increasingly digital future, the challenge is no longer to digitise payments. The challenge is to ensure that every citizen can benefit from the opportunities that digital finance creates. Savings, insurance, healthcare, education, investments, government services, and cross-border trade must all become more accessible through trusted digital channels.

For HiPipo, this moment is both a validation and a call to action. The Bank of Uganda’s findings demonstrate that the journey toward financial inclusion is working. Yet they also remind us that millions more people across Uganda and Africa still need access, knowledge, confidence, and opportunity.

The numbers may belong to the Bank of Uganda, but the achievement belongs to an entire ecosystem that has spent years building the foundations of digital trust. And as Uganda’s digital payments story continues to unfold, one message stands out above all others. When financial systems are designed to include everyone, everyone has a greater chance to prosper.

Uganda Airlines Signs Sh3.7 Trillion Deal with Boeing for 10 New Aircraft

Uganda Airlines has signed a landmark commitment with American aircraft manufacturer Boeing to acquire 10 new aircraft, a deal valued at approximately Sh3.7 trillion, funded through domestic revenue collections.

The agreement was signed on Wednesday, 10th June 2026, at State House Entebbe in the presence of President Yoweri Museveni. Uganda Airlines Acting Chief Executive Officer Girma Wake and Boeing Executive Vice President and Head of Sales for Africa, Anbessie Yitbarek, put pen to paper on what both parties described as the beginning of a long-term partnership.

Under the agreement, Uganda Airlines will acquire eight Boeing passenger aircraft, each with a seating capacity of 294 passengers, alongside two cargo freighters: a Boeing 767 wide-body converted freighter and a Boeing 737 Boeing Converted Freighter (BCF).

The first phase of the agreement will involve the delivery of four large passenger aircraft before the remaining aircraft are delivered.

Minister of Works and Transport Fred Byamukama described the project as a strategic investment that will enhance Uganda’s connectivity with the rest of the world.

“It is a very expensive project, but the President guided that we have no other option,” Byamukama said. “We need to build our own airline. That is how Uganda can be connected to the rest of the world.”

The minister disclosed that the government is expected to make an initial payment of Shs460 billion as part of the implementation process, with the entire project costing about Shs3.7 trillion.

“This money comes from taxpayers’ contributions through government revenue collections, which the President directed should be invested in expanding Uganda Airlines,” he explained.

Byamukama observed that the expansion will significantly reduce Uganda’s dependence on transit hubs in other countries and increase direct flights into the country.

“Uganda will be connected directly to the rest of the world,” he said. “We shall bring many investors directly to Uganda. Previously, investors had to transit through other countries and make several stopovers. With the addition of these aircraft, we shall have more direct routes and connections.”

The acquisition forms part of a broader government strategy to expand the national carrier’s fleet, increase direct international connections, boost tourism and trade, and position Uganda as a key aviation hub in the region, according to a release from the Presidential Press Unit.

The inclusion of two cargo freighters signals Uganda’s ambition to capture a share of the air freight market, which has grown significantly across Africa in recent years. The Boeing 767 wide-body converted freighter and Boeing 737 Boeing Converted Freighter will allow the airline to transport goods more efficiently, supporting export-oriented sectors such as agriculture, horticulture, and manufacturing.

The minister emphasised that the aircraft acquisition aligns with the government’s broader infrastructure development agenda, which includes the expansion of Entebbe International Airport and the completion of Kabalega International Airport in Hoima.

He expressed optimism that the investments would significantly increase tourist arrivals and enhance Uganda’s competitiveness in international aviation over the next decade.

“We are finalising Kabalega Airport and expanding Entebbe Airport,” Byamukama said. “We know that within the next ten years, Uganda will be where it should be in terms of aviation development.”

Byamukama also revealed the government’s plans to eventually introduce domestic air services to improve connectivity within Uganda.

“Once we stabilise the expanded international operations, we shall embark on domestic flights so that Ugandans can easily fly to destinations such as Gulu, Kotido, Kidepo, and Mbarara,” he added.

If implemented, domestic services would open up tourism and business travel to regions currently accessible only by long road journeys.

Boeing Vice President of Sales for Africa, Anbessie Yitbarek, pledged the company’s commitment to supporting Uganda Airlines beyond aircraft supply through technical expertise, training, and capacity-building programmes.

He said Boeing would work closely with Uganda Airlines to ensure sustainable growth and operational excellence as the airline expands its fleet and route network.

Also present at the signing were Minister of Finance Henry Musasizi, former Works Minister General Katumba Wamala, former Finance Minister Matia Kasaija, Permanent Secretary Ramathan Ggoobi, Uganda Airlines Board Chairperson Priscilla Mirembe Sseruka, and Chargé d’Affaires of the United States Embassy in Uganda, Mikael Cleverley.

Uganda Airlines was relaunched in 2019 after the collapse of the original carrier decades earlier. The airline currently operates a modest fleet serving regional and a few international destinations. This deal represents a dramatic scaling up of its ambitions.

According to the airline, the planned acquisition will substantially increase its capacity to serve regional, continental, and intercontinental markets while supporting Uganda’s economic transformation agenda. The airline noted that the additional aircraft will facilitate trade, tourism, investment promotion, and cargo transportation, directly contributing to the implementation of Uganda Vision 2040.

While the government has framed the deal as a strategic necessity, the Sh3.7 trillion price tag raises questions about affordability and sustainability. The funding will come entirely from domestic revenue collections, meaning taxpayers are bearing the full cost. There has been no public disclosure of the repayment terms, interest rates, or total cost over the life of the agreement.

Additionally, Uganda Airlines will need to recruit and train additional pilots, cabin crew, engineers, and ground staff to operate the expanded fleet. The airline will also need to secure landing slots and regulatory approvals in new markets. These operational challenges are significant and will require careful execution.

For now, the government is celebrating the deal as a milestone. The first four passenger aircraft are expected to be delivered under the initial phase, though specific delivery dates have not been announced.