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The Commercial Division of the High Court has embarked on an intensive mediation exercise aimed at clearing at least 320 banking-related cases within two weeks as part of broader efforts to tackle case backlog and unlock billions of shillings tied up in litigation.
The initiative, conducted under the Judiciary’s quarterly mediation fortnight, comes amid concern over a growing pile of unresolved commercial disputes, particularly in the banking loans and credits cluster.
Launching the initiative at the commercial court today, May 18, 2026, Principal Judge Jane Frances Abodo said the mediation settlement fortnight is designed to accelerate the resolution of commercial disputes through Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) mechanisms with special emphasis on court-annexed mediation.




Abodo urged the members of the legal fraternity to embrace the initiative, noting that the hallmark of a great advocate in the 21st century is no longer only the ability to litigate aggressively but the wisdom and skill to act as an effective problem-solver that guides clients towards timely, cost- effective and commercially sensible solutions through ADR.
“Through this settlement fortnight, we seek to achieve measurable outcomes, including having significantly fewer cases remaining in our courts, faster and more satisfactory resolution of banking and commercial disputes, improved protection of stakeholders and greater confidence in the country’s financial ecosystem,” Abodo said.
Value of cases above sh500b
High Court judge Anna Mugenyi, also the head of the Commercial Court, revealed that as of May 6, this year, the Commercial Court had 1,730 cases in banking and credit cases pending, and out of those, 326 cases were extracted for this fortnight’s mediation.
“The value of the 1,730 cases is about shillings 552 billion. The estimation value for the 326 cases set for mediation is shillings 200 billion. We expect that at the end of the mediation period, sh200b would have been unlocked into the economy. I know that by resolving these cases, we would have unlocked a substantial amount of money into the economy. We shall reduce the long backlog in banking,” She said.
Justice Mugenyi said the overall pending cases at the commercial court are over 8,000 cases.
“We ask that our litigators embrace compromise, and we also ask that the stakeholders, the bankers. We ask that our stakeholders embrace compromise; commercial disputes resolved today will cost less than years of litigation. We also ask that our stakeholders comply promptly with the agreed settlement terms, which will strengthen ADR culture,” Justice Mugenyi said.
She added, “Out of the 326 cases, we are optimistic that we shall settle 50% of them by the end of the mediation period. The remaining 50% will be set in motion, and the negotiations will continue.”
Joseph Sevuma, the legal adviser of Kampala City Traders Association (KACITA), commended the judiciary for the initiative, saying it is going to boost the economy.
The head of the Commercial Court, Justice
Benefits of mediation
Unlike the adversarial litigation system, mediation leads not only to faster resolution of disputes but also to confidentiality and significant cost savings.