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Uganda last week hosted a defining milestone in its Intellectual Property (IP) journey as World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) director general Daren Tang undertook a landmark mission to Kampala from December 3—5, 2025.
Uganda Registration Services Bureau (URSB) his hosts in a statement released on December 5, 2025, said Tang’s visit, among the most high-level WIPO engagements in recent years, underscores Uganda’s growing commitment to strengthening national IP systems, supporting its innovators, and positioning creativity at the centre of long-term economic transformation.
As the nation’s IP office, the URSB said it is spearheading key events, including the launch of the “IP in Schools” programme, and strategic engagements between the WIPO delegation and the Uganda Government leadership.
“As the national IP office, URSB is proud to lead this historic engagement,” said Registrar General Mercy K. Kainobwisho. “We look forward to showcasing the strides we have made, from expanding IP awareness to nurturing innovation in schools and across industries. This mission will deepen our collaboration with WIPO and accelerate Uganda’s journey toward an innovation-driven economy.”
Under Tang’s leadership since 2020, WIPO has redefined its mandate, no longer merely an administrative custodian of IP rights, but a catalyst for jobs, enterprise growth, social development, and cultural flourishing.
Tang has championed transforming IP into a concrete tool for economic and social empowerment, especially for SMEs, youth, women, and local communities. His forward-looking approach emphasises capacity building, inclusiveness, and commercialisation, ensuring that IP is accessible not only to large companies but also to grassroots innovators.
In his 2025 address at the WIPO Assemblies, Tang stated, “Sometimes the most powerful forces are unseen. One of the great economic shifts in recent times is the quiet revolution in value creation from tangible assets to intangible ones like brands, designs, software, and data.”
This visit to Uganda presents a vivid opportunity to bring that vision to life by embedding IP at the heart of national development and turning creativity into concrete socio-economic impact.
Strategic significance of the visit to Uganda
School Innovation Exhibitions and IP in Schools Program -spotlighting the creativity of Uganda’s youth, with student-led innovations in robotics, agritech, among others.
Strengthened Institutional Framework - the visit is poised to catalyse legal and institutional reforms, accelerate commercialisation of scientific and creative outputs, attract technical assistance, and mobilise IP-based financing and partnerships.
According to Kainobwisho, the visit signals a powerful shift. “Uganda is no longer on the side-lines of the global IP conversation. We are building a modern, future-ready ecosystem that supports innovators, researchers, and young creators. WIPO’s presence affirms that momentum.”
For the past decade, URSB has spearheaded landmark reforms to ease doing business, from streamlining company registration to instituting one-stop business facilitation services. Under the leadership of URSB board chairman Francis Butagira, the Bureau launched its new strategic plan IV (2025/26–2029/30) aimed squarely at, “positioning Uganda as the best destination for doing business.”
“We are committed to creating an environment where investors, innovators, and entrepreneurs can thrive. This plan is about formalising opportunity and driving transformation,” Butagira stated at the plan’s launch.
The visit by WIPO’s Director General comes at a strategic moment, reinforcing Uganda’s credentials not just as a fertile ground for creativity and innovation, but as a compelling destination for global investors seeking a stable, efficient, and forward-looking business environment.
URSB said the presence of the Director General signals WIPO’s commitment to making IP “relevant, concrete and visible for all”, especially to grassroots innovators, youth, women, SMEs, and local communities.
Uganda stands at the peak of a transformation, with creativity, innovation, and IP no longer relegated to corners but becoming central pillars of economic and social development.