By JULIUS BARIGABA
In Summary
- Uganda’s National Council of Higher Education (NCHE) is raising questions over the manner in which more than 1,000 South Sudanese were admitted to Busoga University and went on to graduate in a space of two months.
- Besides the South Sudanese, there are 50 Nigerian nationals involved in the scandal.
- At the heart of the matter is financial reward for the university, while for the students, the promise of academic papers that would keep them in key positions in government made it a worthwhile investment.
Another Ugandan university is caught up in an academic fraud
scandal that is also threatening to engulf Kampala’s diplomatic ties
with several countries whose nationals were irregularly admitted and
awarded degrees.
The EastAfrican has obtained copies of licence
documents and correspondence between whistleblowers, the education
attaché at the South Sudan embassy and Uganda’s National Council of
Higher Education (NCHE), raising questions over the manner in which more
than 1,000 South Sudanese were admitted to Busoga University and went
on to graduate in a space of two months.
The NCHE has now opened investigations into this matter after
Lual Akol Nhial, the South Sudan education attaché asked the body to
review the admission of these students — most of whom are government
officials and generals in the army — to analyse their continuous
semester results, coursework and assignments and tuition fee payments of
the past three years.
The official also asked the Council to investigate the
affiliation of Busoga University in Uganda and Star University College
in Juba and review the attendance lists during lectures and study
programmes of Busoga University. He also called for sanctions on
students who did not qualify to graduate.
Besides the South Sudanese, there are 50 Nigerian nationals involved in the scandal.
'Quick fix'
The NCHE executive director Prof John Opuda-Asibo told The EastAfrican that “there are usually powerful people behind these admissions.”
At the heart of the matter is financial reward for the
university, while for the students, the promise of academic papers that
would keep them in key positions in government made it a worthwhile
investment.
For the two-month course and academic papers, sources indicate
that Busoga University bagged more than $1 million as each student paid
over the odds, forking out $1,000 in tuition fees — way higher than the
average of $300 per semester, for most programmes in Ugandan
universities.
According to the trail of documents, the students were
transferred from Star University College in Juba to Busoga University
only in July this year, and by end of September, the latter had them on
the list of graduands to be awarded various academic qualifications.
Star University College obtained “temporary approval for
operation” from South Sudan’s National Council for Higher Education on
July 21, 2016, implying that the students the institution transferred to
Busoga University could not have been pursuing programmes which take
two to three years for the award of diplomas and degrees.
Further, according to sources familiar with the manner in which
this fraud was planned and orchestrated, most of the students are
generals in the South Sudan army — who occupy high offices and needed a
“quick fix” of academic papers to remain in these positions.
The students also lacked the minimum criteria for admission — an advanced level certificate or its equivalent.
In the paper trail is a handwritten memo to the NHCE executive
director, from a whistle blower who says he was a senior officer at
Busoga University until “I was terminated from that post on Monday
September 19, 2016.”
He adds that the South Sudanese students “are for graduation yet
they have never been legally registered by the university. There was no
formal registration done to verify the authenticity, accuracy and
correctness of the academic documents for these students.”
Forged results
His letter also mentions the group of Nigerians from Cavendish
University, “which I investigated and found that over 50 of them had
forged results yet some of them are appended on the graduation list of
September 30, 2016.
“Please investigate these issues and if anything wrong happens, I
disassociate myself from any intended errors of whatsoever sort,” he
signs off.
The NCHE boss Prof Opuda-Asibo wrote to the Busoga University
vice chancellor on September 27, warning that the institution was
violating its terms of a provisional licence.
“It has been alleged that your university is in the process of
graduating a number of students who did not meet the minimum entry
criteria set for admissibility to the academic programmes for which you
intend to make awards, contrary to Section 5 (j) of the Universities and
Other Tertiary Institutions Act 2001, as amended and the provisions of
Statutory Instrument 63 of 2007,” he wrote.
Prof Opuda-Asibo, whose body regulates tertiary education in
Uganda, ordered that the graduation of September 30 be halted, but the
university management paid a deaf ear and proceeded to hold the
graduation ceremony.
In his letter, Prof Opuda-Asibo also asked for information on
all students admitted that were about to graduate, the academic
programmes the university offers and the time they were accredited by
NCHE, list of university staff and their appointment letters, among
others.
Higher education
“This is an urgent matter concerning the value and regulation of
higher education in our country and its standing regionally and
internationally,” Prof Opuda-Asibo concluded.
In an interview with The EastAfrican, Prof Opuda-Asibo confirmed his office was investigating the issue.
“We are still following it; it takes time…we have to send people
there to investigate. But we will get to the bottom of it,” he said.
The Speaker of Parliament Ms Rebecca Kadaga, who is the vice
chairperson of Busoga University Council, entered the fray, citing a
breach of the Diplomatic Privileges Act by Mr Nhial for attempting to
block his countrymen from graduating in ceremonies held on September 29
and 30.
In a protest note to the South Sudan’s ambassador to Uganda, Ms
Kadaga demanded to know if the action of Mr Nhial was “the official
position of the Government of South Sudan” and if so “why it was not
routed through the Uganda Ministry of Foreign Affairs”.
“I would also like to know why you, the officially accredited
envoy of the South Sudan Government did not address the Uganda
Government,” she wrote on November 2. “I am considering writing to the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs to lift the diplomatic immunity of the
Education Attaché for the above breach.”
Our efforts to seek comment from Ms Kadaga and Busoga University administration failed
The scandal comes just three years after Kampala University —
another institution of higher learning in Uganda — was accused of
irregularly conferring a degree on the Governor of Kenya’s Mombasa
County Hassan Johot.
In an April 2013 resolution, NCHE ruled that Mr Joho’s degree
was a fraud and should be recalled as “there was no clear evidence that
academic due process was followed from admission to graduation regarding
a Bachelor of Business Administration degree (Human Resource Management
option) awarded to Mr Hassan Joho by Kampala University.”
In October 2014, however, the Ugandan High Court upheld the
validity of the certificate, quashing the council’s earlier decision on
it.
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