Dean Lubowa Saava once operated outside the law and paid for it. Now he runs a fully licensed TV station — and Uganda’s top communications regulator is using his story to make a pointThere are not many people who go from being arrested for broadcasting without a licence to sitting across from the Executive Director of the Uganda Communications Commission for a congratulatory meeting. Dean Lubowa Saava, proprietor of Gano Mazima TV, is one of them.On April 23, UCC Executive Director Nyombi Thembo met with Saava in what was as much a symbolic engagement as it was a regulatory one. Having previously operated outside the regulatory framework — a path that led to his arrest and prosecution — Saava has since completed the journey to full licensing compliance. Nyombi Thembo used the occasion to make a broader argument that Uganda’s media and communications sector needs to hear.“I want to congratulate Dean Lubowa Saava on obtaining his licence,” Nyombi said. “This is a major step in aligning professional activities with the sector’s regulatory standards.”The meeting was not just about one broadcaster’s redemption arc. Nyombi Thembo was deliberate in framing it as a teachable moment for the wider digital content space — a space that in Uganda is growing faster than the rules that govern it.His core argument: regulation exists to protect, not to punish. It provides the framework within which creative expression can thrive sustainably, while keeping platforms accountable to the public they serve.That message lands in a particularly charged moment. Uganda now has over 58 million mobile subscriptions, approximately 25 million unique users, and more than 21 million smartphones actively in use. Platforms like TikTok and YouTube reach millions of Ugandans daily — many of them young people producing and consuming content with little awareness of where the regulatory lines are drawn.“In a landscape where over 21 million smartphones are actively in use and platforms such as TikTok and YouTube reach millions, regulation becomes essential rather than optional for ensuring safety and accountability,” Nyombi said.For the growing number of Ugandan students and young people who have built audiences online — running YouTube channels, TikTok pages, radio stream setups, or community TV operations — Saava’s story is a cautionary tale with a happy ending attached.The UCC is signalling that it would rather bring people into the system than hunt them down outside it. The Commission says it is shifting its engagement approach — prioritising dialogue with consumers and operators alongside enforcement, with the goal of building trust rather than simply issuing fines and summons.That is a meaningful shift in tone, even if the underlying law has not changed.Beyond the Saava story, the meeting touched on issues that affect the entire digital generation. UCC is advancing policies around data protection — recognising that as personal data becomes more valuable in the digital economy, stronger safeguards are needed. The Commission is also pushing open data frameworks to encourage innovation and research, particularly in academic and tech startup spaces.On youth employment, Nyombi Thembo reiterated UCC’s push for digital and media literacy — equipping young people with the skills to use platforms productively and build genuine careers in the digital economy, rather than operating in grey zones that leave them legally and professionally exposed.Dean Lubowa Saava’s journey — from unlicensed broadcaster to legitimate proprietor — is unlikely to be unique. Across Uganda, there are content creators, community radio operators, and aspiring TV producers working outside the framework, either out of ignorance, frustration with bureaucracy, or a calculated risk that nobody will notice.The UCC’s message, delivered through this very public meeting, is simple: the framework exists, the door is open, and compliance is achievable. The alternative — as Saava knows better than most — is a much harder road.The post UCC ED Nyombi Thembo Highlights Role of Regulation in Strengthening Media Sector was written by the awesome team at Campus Bee.