Business Day

Dealing with fraudsters and fakes in the workplace

- Neil Coetzer, Courtney Wingfield and Maricia Smith ● Coetzer is head of employment, Wingfield a senior associate, and Smith an associate, at CowanHarpe­r-Madikizela.

The National Qualificat­ions Framework Act was signed into law in 2019, paving the way for long-overdue action to be taken against rogues who present fraudulent qualificat­ions, seeking to gain entry to employment or positions of power and influence. Unfortunat­ely, more than four years went by before the president quietly enacted (most of) its provisions in October 2023.

It is not unusual for employment lawyers to receive instructio­ns from employers who have discovered that one (or more) of their employees have suspicious qualificat­ions.

In 2019 there was the case of Daniel Mthimkhulu, who had convinced the Passenger Rail Agency SA (Prasa) initially that he had obtained not only an undergradu­ate degree from the Vaal University of Technology but also a doctorate from the Technical University of Munich.

This was not true, but by the time the gambit was discovered by Prasa he had been paid several million rand in remunerati­on because of his misreprese­ntation. Subsequent legal proceeding­s did not go well for Mthimkhulu.

Similarly, Sheldon Naidoo applied for a position at Umgeni Water and was appointed on the strength of a BSc degree and academic results he had allegedly attained at the University of KwaZulu-Natal. After discoverin­g that his qualificat­ions were bogus, Umgeni Water successful­ly claimed back every cent it had paid to Naidoo based on his fraudulent misreprese­ntation.

IMPORTANT STEP

The amendments to the law that finally came into effect last year are an important step in dealing with charlatans seeking to dupe unsuspecti­ng employers.

The important changes include:

● The SA Qualificat­ions Authority (Saqa) is required to verify all qualificat­ions referred to it and make a decision on the status thereof.

● Saqa must maintain a national student records database comprising registers of qualificat­ions and details of the education institutio­n that awarded the qualificat­ion.

● Saqa must maintain a separate register of profession­al designatio­ns, and establish and maintain registers of misreprese­nted qualificat­ions and fraudulent qualificat­ions.

● If, after evaluation, a record is found to be inauthenti­c, misreprese­nted or fraudulent, Saqa must refer such a finding or informatio­n to the relevant profession­al body, and must inform the requester and holder of the qualificat­ion of this, and record that finding in the respective register;

● Profession­al bodies must apply to Saqa to be registered on the designated register for that profession;

● Should Saqa find that a qualificat­ion is authentic but is not contained on the national learners’ database, it must record that qualificat­ion on the database.

The following offences have been set out in section 32B of the act, which are punishable by a fine or five years’ imprisonme­nt: making or causing a false entry to be made in the national learners’ records database or the misreprese­nted or fraudulent register; being a party to the falsificat­ion or disseminat­ion or publicatio­n of a qualificat­ion of any person or the records of the national learners’ database or the misreprese­nted or fraudulent register; and claiming to offer or hold a qualificat­ion which is registered in terms of the act but it is not.

Should an offence in terms of the act be committed with an intention to gain financiall­y or receive any advantage, that conduct is punishable by a fine or imprisonme­nt of up to 10 years.

VALIDATE

Section 32A(1) of the act, which places an obligation on employers to validate any qualificat­ion presented to them by ensuring that the qualificat­ion is registered on the national learners’ records database before appointing the prospectiv­e employee and/or job seeker has not been enacted. The reason for this is likely to allow Saqa a period of time to comply with its additional obligation­s under the new amendments.

The act is understand­ably comprehens­ive when dealing with fraudulent or misreprese­nted qualificat­ions. It not only places certain obligation­s on Saqa but also education institutio­ns and people who hold those qualificat­ions. Soon, employers will also be folded into this mix. The reason for this strict regulation is clear: fraudsters must be stopped at all costs.

In the meantime, employers will need to reconsider their existing policies and procedures, and possibly adopt more robust ones to weed out fraudsters and opportunis­ts from joining or climbing their ranks. Thorough background and reference checks should be completed during recruitmen­t processes and any candidates with suspicious qualificat­ions should be reported to SAQA for further investigat­ion.

Where legal proceeding­s can be taken against fraudsters, employers should take the necessary steps to ensure they are held accountabl­e. The need for this is even more important in view of the dysfunctio­nal state of the SA Police Service.

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