KAMPALA - The betting industry is up in arms following a government proposal to ban cash transactions in the sector. Stakeholders warned that the measure could further cripple the industry.
The outcry accrues from the Tax Procedures Code (Amendment) Bill 2025, which was tabled by finance minister Matia Kasaija.
The Bill is currently being scrutinised by the Parliament’s finance committee chaired by Rwampara County lawmaker Amos Kankunda of the National Resistance Movement (NRM).
According to the proposal, people who want to bet can either place their bets using their gadgets or through the machines at betting hubs or shops.
The law proposes that an operator of a casino, gaming or betting activity shall only receive a wager or money staked and only make payouts through the gaming and betting centralised payments gateway system licensed by the Bank of Uganda.
The Bill further proposes to insert Section 93(B), where any operator who fails to comply with the system would be liable to a penal tax equivalent to double the gaming or withholding tax due, or sh110m whichever is higher.
The centralised gateway shall be expected to interface directly with the Uganda Revenue Authority’s electronic notice system, allowing for real-time monitoring of transactions and tax compliance.
However, while appearing before MPs on Thursday, April 24, 2025, Dr Innocent Nahabwe, the chairperson of Uganda Betting and Gaming Alliance, labelled the move as ill-conceived and detrimental to their survival in business.
Darker side
However, Sheema Municipality MP Dickson Kateshumbwa (NRM) said while the industry provides jobs, it has a dark side.
“We have also listened to some activists who think that this industry actually is a very big danger that people are betting chicken in the village, Emyooga money and Parish Development Model funds and it is not a very productive sector in terms of wealth creation. It takes away, but it does not multiply the income,” he said.
“In my constituency, in every small trading centre, there is a betting house. Of course, you look at it from the employment and rent, angle but where is the money coming from? If I am betting sh10,000 and another one is using sh10,000 to plant cabbages, who is adding wealth,” Kateshumbwa noted.
Mbale Industrial Division MP Karim Masaba said children have been known to bet yet there are laws against it, before lambasting betting companies “I have not heard of a circumstance where a betting company is asking for someone to display their national identity card before they can bet in these shops. You are creating a problem for the country,” he said.
Need for sensitisation
The chairperson of Parliament’s finance committee, Rwampara County lawmaker Amos Kankunda, said there is need for mass sensitisation and regulation of betting.
“Even when we were young in our villages, grazing goats and cows, we were betting. Betting is a natural thing; even when you hide away from it, it is here with us. So, we need to see how to regulate it effectively,” he said.