Sunday World (South Africa)

SIU seeks Ramaphosa’s permission to probe degrees

- By Phumla Mkize phumla@sundayworl­d.co.za

The Special Investigat­ing Unit (SIU) has applied to President Cyril Ramaphosa to amend the scope of its proclamati­on of the investigat­ion into corruption at the University of Fort Hare.

If approved, the amendment, which is under considerat­ion by Ramaphosa, would allow the SIU to investigat­e allegation­s of maladminis­tration in the awarding of masters’ degrees at the university.

Speaking to Sunday World last week, SIU spokespers­on Kaizer Kganyago said the applicatio­n was before Ramaphosa for his considerat­ion.

The allegation­s of maladminis­tration in the awarding of degrees at Fort Hare came under the spotlight when Eastern Cape premier Oscar Mabuyane took the SIU to court to challenge its investigat­ions into his master’s degree registrati­on.

Mabuyane was granted an interdict by the Bhisho High Court to stop the SIU from investigat­ing the awarding of master’s degrees at the university in June last year, arguing that it went beyond the scope of the proclamati­on issued by Ramaphosa in August 2022.

The SIU has been investigat­ing allegation­s of the mi management of funds, sourcing of public servants for study into various faculty programmes by an individual for personal gain and maladminis­tration in the awarding of honours degrees.

Mabuyane was deregister­ed in March 2021 for not meeting the minimum requiremen­ts for admission to the master’s programme. The decision to deregister him was made by the university senate following an investigat­ion conducted by the varsity.

Former director of the Fort Hare’s Bhisho campus and dean of the public administra­tion faculty, Professor Edwin Ijeoma, resigned after the university launched an inquiry into allegation­s of irregulari­ties in the admission and registrati­on of two of his students.

While briefing parliament’s standing committee on public accounts on the progress of his unit’s investigat­ion on March 27 this year, SIU head, advocate Andy Mothibi, said the Fort Hare investigat­ion was ongoing and had its own findings.

He said after Mabuyane obtained the interdict it could not investigat­e irregulari­ties in relation to the awarding of masters’ degrees.

“The court had indicated that the scope of the proclamati­on did not cover masters’ degrees – and had intimated that the SIU needed to get an amendment of the proclamati­on,” he said.

“The SIU had prepared the amendment and submitted it to the Department of Justice on July 7, 2023 for the proclamati­on to be processed,” he added.

The SIU submitted its first interim report to Ramaphosa late last year.

Kganyago said the SIU was planning to submit a second interim report to Ramaphosa by April 31, adding that the amendment of the proclamati­on was one of the contributi­ng factors towards its inability to finalise its report.

On March 8, DA leader John Steenhuise­n asked Ramaphosa in a written parliament­ary question whether he had authorised an investigat­ion by the SIU into allegation­s of degree fraud against Public Service and Administra­tion Minister Noxolo Kiviet. Steenhuise­n also asked whether the investigat­ion was complete and what the findings were.

In his reply, Ramaphosa said the SIU proclamati­ons were not meant for specific individual­s but were rather related to alleged maladminis­tration and malpractic­es in connection with the affairs of a state institutio­n.

“I am informed by the SIU that the investigat­ion is ongoing,” he said in his reply.

 ?? ?? Oscar Mabuyane
Oscar Mabuyane

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