The High Court ruling delivered on June 12, 2026, has sparked widespread celebration across social media, with many hailing it as a landmark victory for student rights. Messages of support have poured in for law student Samantha Mwesigye following her successful legal challenge against Uganda Christian University (UCU).
Yet beneath the celebrations lies a more complicated reality.
While Mwesigye secured a significant legal and financial victory, the judgment stopped short of granting the outcome she most desired—an unequivocal path to graduate with the July 2026 cohort.
For many commentators, the focus has been on the final orders contained in the last pages of the 34-page judgment. However, a closer reading reveals a nuanced decision that vindicates Mwesigye’s grievances while leaving unresolved questions about her academic future.
Court Faults UCU’s Conduct
In a strongly worded judgment, Justice Namanya found that UCU’s handling of Mwesigye’s credit transfer from King’s College London was fundamentally flawed.
“The respondent’s failure to transfer the credits obtained by the applicant in respect of her first year of study towards the degree of Bachelor of Laws at King’s College London, United Kingdom, was tainted by irrationality and procedural impropriety,” the judge ruled.
The court further held that the university’s actions breached Mwesigye’s legitimate expectations after allowing her to progress through the Bachelor of Laws programme for four years, serve as Guild President, and be publicly presented as a student awaiting graduation.
Justice Namanya questioned how the university could admit a student on the basis of transferred credits, permit her to complete the programme, and only raise concerns about equivalence and additional coursework at the final stage of her studies.
The judge described the university’s conduct as “arbitrary, unjust and an abuse of power.”
Admission Process Under Scrutiny
A central issue in the case was whether Mwesigye should have presented a certificate of equivalence from the National Council for Higher Education (NCHE) before her credits from King’s College London could be recognized.
The court noted that neither the Universities and Other Tertiary Institutions Act nor UCU’s admission letter explicitly required such a certificate at the time of admission.
Justice Namanya observed that if the requirement had been clearly communicated in writing when Mwesigye was admitted on August 30, 2022, she would have had ample opportunity to obtain it.
Instead, the university remained silent on the issue for years before raising it shortly before graduation.
That omission, the court found, significantly contributed to the dispute and undermined UCU’s position.
Victory With Limits
Despite criticizing the university’s actions, the court declined to compel UCU to immediately transfer Mwesigye’s credits or place her on the July graduation list.
Justice Namanya emphasized that courts should not interfere with academic decisions that fall within the specialized mandate of universities and regulatory bodies.
“I have declined to interfere with the respondent’s statutory mandate in matters concerning the formulation of academic policy and the making of decisions leading to the award of academic qualifications,” the ruling states.
“Those are matters falling squarely within the respondent’s specialised competence, to be exercised through its duly constituted organs, including the University Senate.”
The decision means that although Mwesigye won the judicial review application, the question of whether she can graduate this year remains unresolved.
She may still be required to complete four first-year courses or secure an NCHE certificate of equivalence before her academic status is finally determined.
Compensation But No Closure
The court awarded Mwesigye Shs100 million in general damages, together with interest at 25 percent per annum from the date of judgment and the full costs of the case.
The award was intended to compensate her for the loss, inconvenience, suffering, and uncertainty caused by the university’s conduct.
However, the financial compensation does little to address the disruption to her academic and professional plans.
With graduation only weeks away, Mwesigye remains uncertain about when she will ultimately obtain her law degree, despite spending years pursuing it.
For her, the judgment delivers vindication but not finality.
Wider Implications for Higher Education
Beyond the immediate dispute, the ruling carries significant implications for universities and students across Uganda.
The judgment reinforces the principle that institutions of higher learning, including private universities performing public functions, can be subjected to judicial scrutiny when they act unfairly or irrationally.
It also strengthens the doctrine of legitimate expectation, signaling that universities cannot casually reverse positions after students have relied on official admissions, policies, and years of academic progression.
At the same time, the decision highlights the limits of judicial intervention in academic affairs.
While courts can scrutinize administrative fairness, procedural propriety, and rationality, they remain reluctant to dictate academic outcomes such as credit recognition, course requirements, or eligibility for graduation.
For transfer students, particularly those joining Ugandan institutions from foreign universities, the judgment serves as a reminder to seek clarity on equivalence requirements and credit transfer conditions at the point of admission.
Universities, meanwhile, are being put on notice that vague communication and last-minute policy enforcement can expose them to costly legal challenges.
A Win That Feels Incomplete
As UCU considers its next steps and Mwesigye weighs her options, the case remains unfinished in many respects.
The court has condemned the university’s conduct and awarded substantial compensation, but it has left the ultimate academic decision in the hands of the university and the NCHE.
For advocates of student rights, the ruling is a significant victory for accountability and fairness in higher education.
For Samantha Mwesigye, however, it remains a triumph tinged with uncertainty—a judgment that rewards her perseverance, validates her complaints, and compensates her losses, yet stops short of delivering the academic closure she sought.
In that sense, it is a victory that is both substantial and incomplete: a legal win, but not yet the end of the journey.
































