United Nations Human Rights Commission has announced the closure of its office in Uganda, stemming from the refusal of authorities of the East Africa country to renew an agreement allowing it to operate.
A UN top human rights official who announced this on Friday said the office has operated in the country in the last 18 years.
The closure comes amidst concern arising from alleged human rights violations, including extrajudicial killings in Uganda and a new law that prescribes the death penalty for some homosexual acts.
The office in Kampala will formally cease operations on Saturday, while sub-offices in Gulu and Moroto closed at the end of June and on Monday respectively, the official announced.
“I regret that our office in Uganda had to close after 18 years, during which we were able to work closely with civil society, people from various walks of life in Uganda, as well as engaging with state institutions for the promotion and protection of the human rights of all Ugandans,” U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk said in a statement from Geneva.
Türk expressed concern about the situation in Uganda ahead of elections in 2026, given an “increasingly hostile environment” for human rights defenders, journalists and others, his office said. He noted that most of the 54 non-governmental organizations that were “arbitrarily suspended” two years ago are still closed.
He also warned Uganda against reneging from its commitments under human rights treaties, including with the “deeply discriminatory and harmful anti-homosexuality law, that is already having a negative impact on Ugandans,” his office said.
Last week, a panel of U.N. experts urged Uganda to repeal that law, which has prompted intense international criticism but has wide support at home, in a report that expressed wider concerns over the human rights situation.
Uganda’s security forces face growing allegations of brutality in their encounters with perceived opponents of the government of President Yoweri Museveni, a U.S. ally who has held power since 1986.
Türk called on authorities to ensure that the national human rights body, the Uganda Human Rights Commission, can function effectively. He said it “is chronically under-funded and under-staffed, and reports of political interference in its mandate undermine its legitimacy, independence and impartiality.”