The Uganda Communications Commission (UCC) has directed telecommunications operators to block at least 500 websites accused of distributing pornographic content, in a renewed nationwide crackdown aimed at protecting minors and enforcing public morality standards.Speaking on behalf of the Commission, UCC spokesperson Ibrahim Bbosa said telecom providers had complied with a formal notice issued on April 2, leading to the restriction of access to hundreds of both local and international websites hosting explicit material.Bbosa explained that the directive is anchored in the Uganda Communications Act, which empowers the regulator under Sections 5 and 10 to set standards, monitor communications content, and enforce compliance across the sector. He added that Section 33 further mandates the Commission to enforce minimum broadcasting standards, including restrictions on content deemed contrary to public morality.“These standards prohibit the broadcast of content that is contrary to morality and require that adult-oriented programmes are appropriately scheduled,” Bbosa said.The enforcement also draws from the Uganda Communications Content Regulations and provisions in the Penal Code Act that criminalise offences against morality and seek to protect children from exposure to pornography. Officials said the affected sites reflect the cross-border nature of online content distribution, with both domestic and foreign platforms included on the blocked list.However, the Commission admitted that enforcement is far from airtight.Bbosa acknowledged that users can still access the blocked sites through Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) and other bypass tools, which allow internet users to evade local restrictions. While telecom operators have implemented the directive, the regulator conceded that VPN use remains a major challenge in fully shutting down access to explicit material.The latest action revives Uganda’s long-running efforts to regulate pornography online, a debate that previously drew public attention during the controversial 2016 anti-pornography enforcement proposals. Authorities say the current move is part of UCC’s wider mandate to safeguard the public, particularly children, from harmful content linked to addiction, distorted values, and moral harm.UCC has since signalled that it will continue monitoring digital platforms and could take further regulatory action against operators or online services found in breach of Uganda’s communications and content laws.The post UCC Blocks 500 Porn Websites, Admits VPNs Still Bypass Restrictions was written by the awesome team at Campus Bee.