Govt revises UMEME buyout to US$118 million
This was contained in the Special Audit Report for the end of lease and assignment between UMEME Limited and Uganda Electricity Distribution Company Limited (UEDCL) that was adopted during plenary sitting on Thursday, 27 March 2025.
The report was tabled by the Minister of State for Finance, Planning and Economic Development (General Duties), Hon. Henry Musasizi.
On 20 March 2025, Parliament adopted the proposal for Government to borrow over US$190 million from Stanbic Bank, on condition of confirmation of actual monetary amount of UMEME's investment by the Auditor General.
Before the revised figure was passed, during plenary sitting on Thursday, 27 March 2025, Deputy Speaker, Thomas Tayebwa urged government to put into consideration the special audit report when finalising with UMEME.
'This morning, the Auditor General submitted a special audit report, verifying and confirming the buyout amount of US$118 million against the approved US$190,' he said.
This however sparked opposition from Kira Municipality Member of Parliament, Hon. Ibrahim Ssemujju, who called for scrutiny of the report before it is adopted.
'We have never passed a report of the Auditor General without the MPs reading it. We have accountability committees that deal with these reports. Have you waived those particular rules that [now] reports can be passed without MPs processing them,' Ssemujju asked.
Leader of the Opposition, Joel Ssenyonyi, questioned the move to adopt the report, saying that by so doing, Parliament would be handing over its appropriation mandate to the Executive.
'The Auditor General's report should be verified and studied, before we pass. It would be good to know what is in the report,' he said.
But the Deputy Speaker guided that the special audit report, unlike annual reports does not require to be referred to a committee.
'This is a time bound report, we must sort out UMEME by 31 March [2025]. It is a matter of beating deadlines, which is in the contract. If we do not settle, UMEME will have a blank cheque to determine penalties and interests,' Tayebwa said.
Hon. Ekanya Geofrey (FDC, Tororo North County) agreed with the Deputy Speaker, citing practices from neighboring countries like Tanzania, Kenya and South Africa where, he said, governments there do not wait for Parliament approval before implementing such reports.
'Special audit reports have issues of criminal in nature, but also this report is time bound. We request that Speaker invokes the necessary rules so that when Parliament takes a decision, it is within our Rules,' Ekanya said.
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Parliament of the Republic of Uganda.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The National
an hour ago
- The National
Saudi Arabia's land tax to unlock real estate supply as new foreign buyers eye properties
New land tax rules that came into effect in Saudi Arabia this month are expected to spur the development of property projects and boost housing supply. The kingdom increased the annual levy on undeveloped land to as much as 10 per cent of the value of a plot. It introduced fees of between 5 per cent to 10 per cent on long-term vacant buildings, as part of regulations introduced by the government last week. The changes apply to plots measuring 5,000 square metres or more, within the approved urban boundaries, Saudi Arabia's Ministry of Municipalities and Housing said. The plan comes as the kingdom opens up foreign ownership of property from January 2026, particularly in the cities of Riyadh and Jeddah. 'By raising the annual levy on undeveloped land and introducing a fee of up to 10 per cent on long-term vacant buildings, the reforms make it significantly more costly for owners to hold assets without putting them to productive use. This is expected to push many landowners to develop, sell, or lease their properties, bringing more projects to market,' Nils Vanhassel, legal director and tax adviser at DLA Piper Middle East, told The National. 'Over time, these measures should help balance supply and demand, moderate land price inflation, and improve housing affordability in line with Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 goals.' Saudi Arabia, the Arab world's largest economy, is undertaking reforms as it aims to attract more foreign direct investment and diversify its economy away from oil. The reforms span sectors including stock markets, property, investment and governance of companies, among others. Last month, the country updated its rules to allow foreigners to buy property in specific zones in Riyadh and Jeddah, with 'special requirements' for home ownership in Makkah and Madinah. It is also permitting foreign citizens to invest in publicly listed local companies that own real estate in Makkah and Madinah, as the kingdom seeks to attract international investments and boost its capital markets. Saudi Arabia also opened its stock exchange to residents of Gulf countries, who are now allowed to invest directly in the kingdom's main Tadawul market as the kingdom continues to introduce new amendments to its laws. The country aims to boost home ownership among Saudi citizens to 70 per cent by 2030 through new government initiatives such as Sakani and simplifying access to affordable long-term financing. The Saudi home ownership rate reached 63.7 per cent at the end of 2023, a 16.7 percentage point increase since the National Transformation Plan's introduction in 2016 and surpassing the government's 2023 target of 63 per cent, according to a recent Knight Frank report. As of mid-2025, more than 5,500 undeveloped plots spanning approximately 411 million square metres have been identified under the white land tax regime in Riyadh, Jeddah, Makkah and Dammam, according to DLA Piper. This marks a substantial increase compared to the initial 2017 roll-out, which covered 1,320 plots totalling about 387 million square metres, the law firm said. More developers entering market 'While [the land tax's] full impact will be felt over the medium to long term, given that most projects take three to nine months for planning and design, and a further two to three years for construction, it could prompt developers who had previously delayed their plans to re-enter the market,' said Rahul Bansal, head of strategic consultancy for the GCC region at Savills Middle East. 'Many may look to collaborate with external partners or investors to bring new opportunities to life.' New developers are entering the Saudi property market amid new opportunities. Last year, the Trump Organisation teamed up with London-listed Dar Global to launch a residential project worth 2 billion Saudi riyals ($533 million) in Jeddah. It is looking to start two more projects in Riyadh. Home prices have continued to rise in key cities in Saudi Arabia amid higher demand. Apartment prices in Riyadh are up by 82 per cent since 2019, while villa prices have risen by close to 50 per cent over the same time period, Faisal Durrani, head of research Mena at Knight Frank, said. The new regulations are expected to solve the problem to some extent, with new developments increasing supply in the market. 'Raising the tax rate on vacant land to 10 per cent should help to unlock more development sites and therefore potentially ease the burden on developers,' Mr Durrani said. 'In turn, the move may slow the rate of price growth for vacant land, which, in the long run, should translate into homes that are within the affordability limits of most Saudi nationals. We have found that two thirds of Saudis are prepared to spend a maximum of 1.5 million Saudi riyals on a new home.' Surge in real estate deals During 2024, the total number of real estate transactions across all asset classes in Saudi Arabia surged by 37 per cent to more than 236,690 deals, while the total value of all deals grew by 27 per cent to 267.8 billion riyals. Residential transactions, which accounted for 61.5 per cent of all real estate deals by total value, registered a 38 per cent increase in the number of deals to just under 202,661 sales. While the value of residential transactions increased by 35 per cent to 164.8 billion over the same period, according to Knight Frank.

Zawya
13 hours ago
- Zawya
Rule of law is Africa's new gold: African Development Bank Group's (AfDB's) Adesina calls for bold legal and governance reforms to unlock prosperity
'When Africa stands for the rule of law, the world will stand with Africa,' the President of the African Development Bank Group ( Dr Akinwumi Adesina, has told more than 1,200 lawyers, judges, and government officials attending the Kenya Law Society's 2025 Annual Conference. Delivering the closing keynote, title Public Finance, Governance, Justice and Development, Dr. Adesina drew a clear link between judicial independence, sound public finance, and sustainable economic growth. He stressed that Africa's true wealth lies not only in its natural resources but also in its ability to govern them transparently, enforce contracts fairly, and ensure justice for all citizens. Turning challenges into opportunities Africa faces a $100 billion annual gap in foreign direct investment, he noted, a situation compounded by weak rule of law rankings, debt vulnerabilities, and predatory 'vulture fund' cases. These involve investors buying national debt at a discount on secondary markets, then exploiting weak legal systems to sue debtor nations for full repayment — plus backdated interest and legal fees. 'Evidence suggests that foreign direct investments move more to countries that have political stability, stable democracies, transparency, and low levels of corruption,' Adesina said during the conference held at Kenya's coastal town of Diani, some 35 kilometres south of Mombasa. Other key drivers, he added, include an independent and transparent judiciary, strong regulatory frameworks, public accountability, efficient public service, competition policy, and respect for intellectual property rights. He also underlined the vital connection between justice and development, arguing that access to justice must be universal. This means legal aid, digitised courts, and grievance mechanisms that bring the law closer to citizens. 'Justice is not a byproduct of development — it is the foundation of development,' he declared. Adesina urged African nations to: Strengthen judicial independence and transparency to attract global capital. Reform natural resource laws to ensure benefits reach communities, not elites. Develop sovereign wealth funds to safeguard prosperity for future generations. Build strong African arbitration systems to settle disputes locally and fairly. He challenged Africa's lawyers, judges, and arbitrators to rise as 'guardians of promise and stewards of destiny' by enforcing constitutional safeguards on public finance. He called on the Kenya Law Society members to champion ethics and environmental, social, and governance (ESG) principles, digitise court systems, improve legal infrastructure, and protect national assets from predatory debt practices. Adesina's keynote culminated a 3-day conference focused on corporate governance, protecting constitutionalism and the rule of law, responsible public finance management, and digitalization of legal systems. The closing ceremony included the participation of Kenya's legal luminaries and government, including Kenya's Chief Justice Martha Koome, Kenya Law Society President Faith Odhiambo, Mombasa County Governor Abdulswamad Nassir and the AfDB's Director General of East Africa Alex Mubiru. Solutions in motion The African Development Bank supports its regional member countries to address governance, public finance, and justice challenges. In Rwanda and Côte d'Ivoire, Bank support to create and modernise specialised commercial courts has reduced dispute resolution times by nearly half, unlocking more than $1 billion in investment. In Seychelles, Bank-backed constitutional reforms require all sovereign borrowing to receive parliamentary approval — contributing to a fall in the debt-to-GDP ratio from over 100% to below 55%. In Kenya, Bank-supported procurement and debt transparency reforms, including parliamentary oversight of public borrowing, are safeguarding public funds. Known as Africa's 'Optimist-in-Chief,' Adesina urged the continent's legal community to recognise that they hold the keys to turning governance into growth and making development a daily reality rather than a distant promise. 'Let us make a choice that history will record, and generations will remember,' he said. 'As lawyers, justices and guardians of the law, I urge you to uphold the rule of law, to execute justice with fairness and righteousness.' Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Development Bank Group (AfDB). About the African Development Bank Group: The African Development Bank Group is Africa's premier development finance institution. It comprises three distinct entities: the African Development Bank (AfDB), the African Development Fund (ADF) and the Nigeria Trust Fund (NTF). On the ground in 41 African countries with an external office in Japan, the Bank contributes to the economic development and the social progress of its 54 regional member states. For more information:


Crypto Insight
20 hours ago
- Crypto Insight
Bitcoin and Ether ETFs post $40B volume in ‘biggest week ever'
US-based spot Bitcoin and Ether exchange-traded funds (ETFs) just logged their strongest week of combined trading volume yet, according to an ETF analyst. 'Biggest week ever for them, thanks to Ether ETFs stepping up big,' ETF analyst Eric Balchunas said in an X post on Friday. Ether ETFs were 'asleep' for 11 months, says Balchunas 'Ether ETFs' weekly volume was about $17b, blowing away record, man did it wake up in July,' Balchunas said. It came the same week Bitcoin reached a new all-time high of $124,000 on Thursday, while Ether came close to reclaiming its November 2021 high of $4,878 on the same day, reaching $4,784 — just 1.94% below — according to CoinMarketCap. Since Thursday, Bitcoin has fallen 5.52% from its all-time high, trading at $117,659, while Ether has dropped 6.20% from its Thursday high, trading at $4,486. However, MN Trading Capital founder Michael van de Poppe said, 'There's way more to come for this cycle.' Ether ETFs take a sharp turn On Monday, spot Ether ETFs recorded their biggest day of net inflows ever, with flows across all funds totalling $1.01 billion. Across the first two weeks of August, they've recorded more than $3 billion in net inflows marking their second-strongest monthly performance to date. Balchunas said it was almost as if Ether ETFs were 'asleep' for the past 11 months and 'then crammed' one year's worth of activity into six weeks. While there was excitement ahead of their July 2024 launch, Ether ETFs initially saw lackluster demand, sparking speculation that Wall Street had yet to find a clear use case for the asset. Meanwhile, Bitcoin ETFs reached new highs of $73,679 just two months after launching in January 2024. Analysts are now drawing parallels between Ether's recent price surge and Bitcoin's post-ETF rally. 'This move is comparable to the BTC ETF launch, when Bitcoin continued to rally upward,' van de Poppe said, adding, 'The ETFs have a massive impact and there's a lot to come for Altcoins.' However, some analysts warn that investors must be patient before Ether reaches a new all-time high. Nansen analyst Jake Kennis said in comments shared with Cointelegraph that a new all-time high for Ether may be weeks or months away, despite ETH currently sitting only a few hundred dollars off a new record price. Source: