





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

Uganda Taps Global Ideas to Fight Counterfeits and Protect Innovation
Uganda is set to strengthen its fight against counterfeit goods and modernize intellectual property protection after joining more than 10,000 global experts at the International Trademark Association (INTA) 2026 Annual Meeting in London.
The five-day conference, held from May 2nd to 6th at the ExCeL London Convention Centre, brought together intellectual property professionals, regulators, enforcement agencies, academics, corporate leaders, and innovators from across the world to discuss the future of intellectual property in the digital era.
The Registrar General represented Uganda, Ms. Mercy K. Kainobwisho, who attended the meeting to study global trends in trademark protection, Artificial Intelligence, anti-counterfeiting enforcement, and commercialisation of intellectual property.
A major focus of the conference was the growing impact of artificial intelligence on intellectual property systems worldwide. Delegates discussed how AI is changing trademark registration, monitoring, and enforcement, while also creating new legal and regulatory challenges.
Participants also raised concerns over rising online counterfeiting, digital fraud, social media infringement, and hidden online sales, which continue to threaten brands and businesses globally.
The meeting allowed Uganda to benchmark its intellectual property systems and enforcement mechanisms against international best practices while strengthening partnerships with global intellectual property stakeholders.
Experts emphasized that intellectual property is now becoming a major economic asset, supporting innovation, investment, and business growth.
The conference further encouraged African countries to modernise intellectual property systems, strengthen regional cooperation, and improve digital enforcement to support innovation and economic transformation.
