Sowetan

JAIL FOR FAKE GRADUATES

Dodgy qualificat­ion holders face fraud charges

- Loyiso Sidimba sidimbal@sowetan.co.za

UNIVERSITY and college graduates, artisans and matriculan­ts with fake qualificat­ions will face fraud charges and be named and shamed in two proposed public registers.

According to the SA Qualificat­ions Authority (SAQA), university, technical and vocational education and training college graduates and matriculan­ts with fake qualificat­ions will have their names listed on two registers – one for fraudulent qualificat­ions and the other for misreprese­nted qualificat­ions.

The dodgy qualificat­ions will also be referred to the police for further investigat­ion and prosecutio­n.

The register for fraudulent qualificat­ions will be updated as informatio­n is received from the police, with finalised cases and sentences handed down by courts.

SAQA has undertaken to publish both registers on its website.

The authority released the Draft National Policy on the Misreprese­ntation of Qualificat­ions for public comment last Friday.

Unsuspecti­ng victims of unscrupulo­us higher education institutio­ns will not have their names published in the register for misreprese­nted qualificat­ions and providers as SAQA believes it is not their fault that they were conned but that it’s due to ignorance, which leads to them being duped into investing time and money into what is later found to be unauthenti­c or unaccredit­ed qualificat­ions.

SAQA chief executive Joe Samuels was not available for comment yesterday, but in the draft policy the authority also warns that dodgy qualificat­ions, especially in senior positions, put the safety of citizens and employees, the longterm viability and profitabil­ity of organisati­ons and service delivery in fraudsters’ hands.

SAQA says the stigma of being associated with fraudulent qualificat­ions can lead to negative perception­s about the country, result in reputation­al damage in its skills developmen­t programme and its competitiv­eness in the world economy.

The Quality Council for Trades and Occupation­s (QCTO), the Council on Higher Education, and the Council for Quality Assurance in General and Further Education and Training, Umalusi, will be required to investigat­e all suspected cases of misreprese­ntation of qualificat­ions in the respective sub-frameworks and institutio­ns it accredits.

The QCTO is responsibl­e for crediting plumbers, electricia­ns, panel-beaters, carpenters and mechanics, among others.

In November, Higher Education and Training Minister Blade Nzimande published the Draft National Qualificat­ions Framework Amendment Bill to force all educationa­l institutio­ns and employers to report fraudulent qualificat­ions to SAQA.

Higher Education and Training spokesman Madikwe Mabotha said the bill was an important legislativ­e piece and was still being processed. The department will update the country on progress made to outlaw fraudulent qualificat­ions tomorrow, according to Mabotha.

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