





Chief Guest Dr. Mary Teopista (Center), Amb. Francis Butagira, Registrar General Ms. Mercy K. Kainobwisho and URSB board members pose for a photo at the URSB ISO Certification External Stakeholders celebration
Hon. Nobert Mao congratulates the Registrar General, Ms. Mercy K. Kainobwisho, and Board member, Ms. Lydia A. Sekkabira on the ISO 9001:2015 certification milestone
Mr. Hamidu Tumuhimbise, a senior Registration Officer, attends to a client during the UEB claimants exercise at the Uganda Business Facilitation Center, Kololo
A delegation from PACRA led by the Deputy Registrar Mr. Chewe Peter Chilufya (Center) visited URSB for a 3 days benchmarking visit on the Intellectual Property Registry on how systems operate, the digital improvements implemented and how these reforms contribute to reduced turnaround time
A delegation from UNOC visits URSB to benchmark on the Digital Transformation Journey.
Director General WIPO Mr. Daren Tang, Minister of Justice Hon. Nobert Mao, The Registrar General Ms. Mercy K. Kainobwisho, URSB Board members a delegation from WIPO pause for a photo at the Uganda Business Facilitation Center during the DG’s mission to Uganda

STEM education and IP innovation are key to Africa’s future – Hon. Mao
The World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) in collaboration with the Uganda Registration Services Bureau (URSB) with support from the Korean Intellectual Property Office (KIPO) launched a groundbreaking regional training programme aimed at empowering educators across the continent with knowledge in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM), entrepreneurship, and intellectual property (IP) education.
The initiative, part of the IP4Youth&Teachers programme, was officially launched in Kampala last week at Protea Hotel by the Minister of Justice and Constitutional Affairs, Hon. Norbert Mao, delivering a stirring address that stressed the critical role of youth in building the future economies of Africa.
“We have one of the youngest populations in the world, and the future of any nation is built on the dreams of its young people. But Innovation must have a foundation, and that foundation is a conducive
environment, legal protection for ideas, and honest preparation of young minds,” Hon. Mao said, likening
innovators to the “real power brokers of the 21st century.”
Mao echoed the programme’s overarching goal of bridging the knowledge gap in IP education across Sub-Saharan Africa by equipping teachers with the tools to foster innovation, creativity, and economic empowerment in the classroom. He urged African governments to take deliberate steps to create robust innovation ecosystems backed by IP protection frameworks that reward creators.
The regional training brought together educators from Uganda, Kenya, Zimbabwe, and other countries for intensive sessions on integrating IP and entrepreneurship into STEM education.