The attendance of Nyesom Wike, Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), and Emmanuel Agim, a Supreme Court judge, at the convocation ceremony of the University of Calabar (UNICAL) has sparked debate.
UNICAL held its 50th anniversary and 37th convocation ceremony on Saturday.
Photos from the event circulating online show Wike seated in the front row alongside Agim and Ekaette Akpabio, wife of Senate President Godswill Akpabio.
These images have generated reactions, given that Agim was the judge who delivered the Supreme Court ruling on the Rivers political crisis.
On February 28, the Supreme Court upheld a Federal High Court ruling that barred the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Accountant-General of the Federation from disbursing statutory monthly allocations to Rivers State.
The ruling mandated the CBN to withhold Rivers’ financial allocations until Governor Siminalayi Fubara presented the state appropriation bill to the Martin Amaewhule-led faction of the assembly.
Additionally, the Supreme Court nullified the local government elections held in Rivers State on October 5, 2024.
The judgment benefited the Amaewhule-led faction, which is aligned with Wike.
The ongoing political crisis in Rivers resulted in President Bola Tinubu declaring a state of emergency, leading to the suspension of Governor Fubara and the state assembly for six months.
At the convocation ceremony, the university conferred an honorary doctorate degree in law on Wike.
‘Agim Didn’t Accompany Wike to Convocation Ceremony’
On Monday, Akande Festus, Director of Information and Public Relations at the Supreme Court, refuted claims that Agim attended the event alongside Wike, calling such statements “misleading and false.”
Festus clarified that Agim was present at the ceremony in his capacity as an honouree and an alumnus of the institution.
“Hon. Justice Agim attended the convocation as an esteemed honouree and an alumnus of the institution, whom the governing council had found worthy to be conferred with an Honorary Doctorate Degree in Law (Doctor Honoris Causa),” the statement reads.
“He was recognized for his significant contributions to the legal profession, which is a reflection of his commitment to justice, integrity, and the rule of law, serving as a model for aspiring legal professionals and students alike.”
Festus also noted that Agim had initially planned to attend the burial of Justice Stanley Alagoa in Bayelsa State along with other Supreme Court justices but received permission to attend the convocation instead.
“We wish to emphasize that Justice Emmanuel Agim’s participation at the ceremony was independent and not as an official representative of any government ministry or department, let alone accompanying any serving or retired government official.”
“Any insinuation to the contrary is not only inaccurate but undermines the judicial independence that is crucial to our democracy.”