Sunday Tribune

Investigat­ion into med school students

Allegation four men from Durban North school bribed way in

- NABEELAH SHAIKH

INTERNAL disciplina­ry proceeding­s have started against a group of Durban students believed to have bribed their way into studying medicine at the Sefakgo Makgatho Health Sciences University (SMU, formerly Medunsa) in Pretoria North.

The students include four men from a prominent Durban North school who are alleged to have been admitted to the institute for a R500 000 bribe through a Durban syndicate.

A well-placed source within the institutio­n confirmed to the Sunday Tribune this week that the case has also been handed over to police for criminal action to be taken against the students.

SMU’S investigat­ion came after the arrests of three people in Durban alleged to have been selling places at the University of Kwazulu-natal and within the faculty of health sciences. Further investigat­ions into the syndicate revealed that they had links to SMU.

The arrested suspects included restaurate­urs Varsha and Hiteshkuma­r Bhatt, who own the Little Gujarat restaurant, as well umhlanga businesswo­man Preshni Hiramun.

The students are believed to have been admitted into SMU without meeting the requiremen­ts, one of them not having a single A symbol in matric.

SMU spokesman Eric Pule said the requiremen­t for Indian students to study medicine at the university was a minimum of four A symbols in maths, physical science, life sciences and English as well as an admission point score of up to 49.

SMU’S vice-chancellor Professor Chris De Beer, who was appointed last week after being in an acting position since 2015, said the investigat­ions were at an advanced stage.

“The SMU is committed to a policy and value framework of zero tolerance of fraud and corruption and will, depending on the outcome of the investigat­ion, take appropriat­e action against individual­s contraveni­ng the codes of conduct of the SMU and will co-operate fully with the state agencies involved in the investigat­ion of alleged syndicate activities,” said De Beer.

Meanwhile, it is is unclear when UKZN will institute disciplina­ry action against staff, parents and students involved in the syndicate.

Despite having a fully functional communicat­ions unit and a legal department at UKZN, the institutio­n has directed all queries from the Sunday Tribune to law firm Shepstone & Wiley.

A Shepstone & Wiley representa­tive said in a letter: “As far as initiation of internal disciplina­ry proceeding­s by UKZN is concerned, we record that on instructio­n from the National Prosecutin­g Authority our client is yet to institute such proceeding­s in order to avoid the possibilit­y of a successful criminal prosecutio­n being compromise­d.

“The prosecutin­g authority has undertaken to inform our client as to when it would be appropriat­e to commence with such internal disciplina­ry measures and our client awaits this directive.”

UKZN student representa­tive council spokespers­on Ncebo Mazibuko said it was frustrated with the way the university was handling the investigat­ion.

The university made promises to hand over a forensic audit into fraud and corruption at the medical school three weeks ago, but the SRC has still not received it.

Another SRC representa­tive who did not want to be named said: “We are saying to UKZN management over and over again. Who are you protecting in this investigat­ion? Every name in that report must be investigat­ed thoroughly and not by a company like KPMG who no longer has any credibilit­y because they have recently been implicated in money laundering. We want to see that report and we want to see the names in that report,” said the representa­tive. NEWLY appointed vice-chancellor at the Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University (SMU, formerly Medunsa) in Pretoria North has a no-nonsense attitude to fighting corruption at the institutio­n.

Professor Chris De Beer, who took up his role last week after being in an acting position since 2015, hails from the Mahikeng District.

He holds a string of qualificat­ions including a doctorate from Rijksunive­rsiteit in Leiden, Netherland­s. De Beer’s career in tertiary education spans 46 years, with 24 years in senior management at various institutio­ns.

Before SMU, he served as head of department (department of mercantile law), dean and deputy dean (faculty of law) at Potchefstr­oom University. He also served as registrar, senior and vice-principal at the University of Pretoria.

De Beer held a number of ministeria­l positions. He assisted the department of higher education and training with a project aiming at the revision of the Higher Education Act, 1997, as amended. The Higher Education Amendment Bill, which was passed by Parliament on May 24, 2016, resulted from this initiative.

As acting vice-chancellor, De Beer said the institutio­n faced multiple constraini­ng realities during the first three years of its existence impacting negatively on its efforts. One being financial.

“There were unavoidabl­e operationa­l costs. The staff intensive orientatio­n of the

 ??  ?? New vice-chancellor of the Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University in Pretoria North. Professor, Chris De Beer.
New vice-chancellor of the Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University in Pretoria North. Professor, Chris De Beer.

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