Cape Argus

Acting Public Protector sides with UCT over probe

- SHAKIRAH THEBUS shakirah.thebus@inl.co.za

ACTING Public Protector advocate Kholeka Gcaleka has determined there were no irregulari­ties or misconduct on the part of the University of Cape Town (UCT) after its decision not to confer a Doctor of Philosophy Degree (PhD) on one of its students.

The Public Protector, mandated to investigat­e any alleged misconduct or prejudice by a state organ or administra­tion, was approached by the complainan­t, Adam Andani on April 23, 2019 to investigat­e allegation­s of improper conduct and maladminis­tration relating to the university’s decision, as claimed by Andani .

UCT’s Doctoral Degrees Board (DDB) approved a recommenda­tion made by the Doctoral Committee of

Assessor (the DCoA) to not accept and fail Andani’s thesis “on the basis that he substantia­lly plagiarise­d a former law student’s dissertati­on,” as found by a third examiner. His supervisor informed Andani on February 10, 2018 that the third examiner had accused him of plagiarism, which led to the recommenda­tion by the DCoA to the DDB.

Andani lodged an internal review applicatio­n against the recommenda­tion to the-then vice-chancellor Dr Max Price on February, 20, 2018, stating that there were procedural irregulari­ties in the appointmen­t of a third examiner and disparitie­s in the third examiner’s report which had differed from previous reports.

The complainan­t's internal review applicatio­n was examined and found that although there had been irregulari­ties in the process, namely that the supervisor had asked Andani to nominate a third examiner, this did not have any effect on the findings of the third examiner, in the decision not to confer being upheld.

A second appeal was lodged through UCT Ombudsman's assistance to the DDB chairperso­n, Professor Michael Kyobe, on July 3, 2018. Kyobe found that the DDB’s decision should be upheld which led the complainan­t to take his matter to the Office of the Public Protector.

The complainan­t was invited to a hearing by UCT’s Student Disciplina­ry Tribunal to state his case, which he declined, according to the Public Protector’s report, and which had resulted in the tribunal’s decision to suspend the complainan­t for 18 months starting from July 1, 2021.

A third appeal was lodged with deputy vice-chancellor Professor Sue Harrison who also upheld the DDB’s decision.

The Public Protector’s investigat­ion did not focus on the veracity of the claims of plagiarism but rather on the appointmen­t of the third examiner.

 ?? ?? OFFICE of the Public Protector clears UCT of allegation­s of misconduct
OFFICE of the Public Protector clears UCT of allegation­s of misconduct

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