Legislation Required Against Diploma Mill Degree Bolders
27 July 2015
By Tariq A. Al-Maeena
A few days ago I received a disturbing email that set of alarm bells and
signals of concern. In a limited but analytical study, Dean Hoke, the founder
of Edu Alliance, an education management-consulting firm based in Abu Dhabi,
United Arab Emirates, disclosed disturbing figures of people with bogus
degrees living and working in the GCC.
Hoke, who has an extensive background in the fields of higher education,
broadcasting and community relations, used a recent New York Times expose on
the bogus degree practices by the Pakistan corporation called Axact and
gleaned out the names of the fake universities offering fake diplomas. He
then cross checked names of these institutions on the LinkedIn website with
GCC professionals who professed to carry credentials from these universities.
What he found out was indeed alarming.
There were over 3,000 people with bogus degrees living in the GCC. Hoke
provided five examples of people who state on LinkedIn that they have a
degree from the bogus schools and what they do for a living:
Saudi Arabia: General Manager at Healthcare Services Company
UAE: Principal at International Private School Abu Dhabi
Qatar: Head of Project Controls at Qatar Gas Company
Kuwait: Safety Site Superintendent
Bahrain: Deputy General Manager of a Islamic Bank
As Hoke describes in his study, "The New York Times determined hundreds of
online universities are likely to be linked to Axact's operation. I decided
to look further into the list of universities to determine how many people
have a degree from one or more of these schools. I went into my LinkedIn
account and began a search of each university, which generated a list of
individuals who reported being a graduate of one of the bogus school. I
restricted my search to the GCC countries (Saudi Arabia, United Arab
Emirates, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, and Oman)."
He summarized his findings as follows: The UAE had the highest number of
bogus degree holders followed very closely by Saudi Arabia. What was
particularly significant to me was the companies in the Kingdom that employed
these fake charlatans. Saudi ARAMCO has four bogus degree holders on their
payroll. Al Marai, Abdul Lateef Jameel and STC also have imposters working
within their organizations, and the list keeps going on and on. The list
includes a variety of organizations from airport expansion to civil works
that have been duped by these frauds who are currently on their payroll and
no doubt have been instrumental in the project delays and high costs.
I had long admired ARAMCO as the premier organization in the Kingdom. But in
recent years I have been receiving a stream of complaints from some of my
readers about the growing ills within the company. Charges of nepotism,
bureaucratic inefficiencies and a general malaise were some of the items
brought up.
Some ARAMCOANS told me they decided to opt for early retirement on account of
the gradual shift from what was a highly fine-tuned organization run
according to high Western standards to the state of affairs as they claim it
is today. Findings by Dean Hoke shore up their credibility because if ARAMCO
has indeed employed bogus degree holders then they have slipped very far down
the ladder.
Hoke also warns us that this list was gleaned only from the names of bogus
universities that Axact was using. "The bad news is that there are many
hundreds of others doing the same thing." And it is not simply bogus degrees
that such companies provides. "Apart from the alleged sale of fake diplomas
and degrees through its online universities and colleges, Karachi-based IT
company Axact has also been offering its services as proxy students',
filling in for all the academic work originally assigned to students enrolled
in reputable educational institutions in US." This is indeed disturbing and
will continue to proliferate in a region that needs quality rather than
quantity.
It is important to remember that Hoke's study was a limited one. I shudder to
imagine what more can he reveal with another exhaustive study and with
unlimited resources at his disposal. It is time to send a strong message to
such charlatans that their bogus credentials will not be tolerated. The media
must play a bigger role in alerting society of such ills. The Shoura Council
must make immediate legislation to penalize all those proven to be carrying
fake degrees with hefty fines and jail sentences.
Otherwise we may one day find ourselves undergoing heart surgery or flying on
an aircraft manned by one of these impostors.
Tariq A. Al Maeena is a Saudi socio-political commentator. He lives in
Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.