The Mercury

Govt job fakes could be jailed

- Nokuthula Ntuli

PUBLIC servants who lie about their qualificat­ions may face jail time. The Department of Higher Education says it wants to pursue criminal charges against those who fake or misreprese­nt their education credential­s.

A spokesman for the department, Khaye Nkwanyana, said yesterday that it wanted those officials who lied about their qualificat­ions to be prosecuted.

The department was busy with “legal consultati­ons”.

“This case (former police spokesman Vincent Mdunge, found guilty of forgery and fraud) sets precedents for other similar cases to follow because previously we were not aware that a person could be convicted for falsifying qualificat­ions. In fact, we had started consultati­on with state attorneys to ascertain if this was possible,” he said.

Previously those officials who were found to have faked their qualificat­ions were either expelled or dismissed, but no criminal charges were pursued.

“One example that comes to mind involved teachers in KwaZuluNat­al who were discharged after the Department of Education found their qualificat­ions to be illegitima­te,” said Nkwanyana.

Yesterday’s sentencing of former KZN provincial police spokesman Colonel Vincent Mdunge to five years in jail for forgery and fraud over his faked 1986 matric certificat­e was an important developmen­t and possibly a precedent-setting case.

“We welcome this conviction because it sends a strong message to those who may be in possession of fake qualificat­ions or considerin­g committing this offence and it is the first of its kind in the country,” said Nkwanyana.

He said last year Higher Education Minister Blade Nzimande directed the South African Qualificat­ions Authority (SAQA) to audit all public officials’ credential­s and had wanted those who lied to be “named and shamed” in a national registry.

“We have started with the national department­s and ours was the first to go through the process. After the national department, SAQA will do the provinces then local government,” he said.

He said the most recent figures were not available, but the Department of Public Service and Administra­tion revealed in March that at least 640 public officials had lied about their qualificat­ions.

“We really encourage all employers, even those in the private sector, to start with the verificati­on of their staff ’s qualificat­ions so that we can eliminate this culture of misreprese­nting.”

Between July and December last year the qualificat­ions authority verified 19 512 records belonging to 13 182 people who had applied for government jobs. Of those, 92 records belonging to 91 people were confirmed to be fraudulent.

Mdunge was found to have falsified his 1986 matric certificat­e, and an investigat­ion revealed that he had failed both his senior certificat­e and supplement­ary exams in 1986.

He used the fake certificat­e to gain employment as a police officer in 1987 and obtained a national diploma in police administra­tion from Unisa in 1997.

The five-year jail term handed down by Durban regional magistrate Thandeka Fikeni came as a shock to Mdunge, but he was granted bail pending an appeal against his conviction and sentence.

Mdunge’s attorney Yusuf Omar said they would lodge an appeal against the sentence and conviction in the next 20 days.

Institute for Security Studies researcher Dr Johan Burger said sending Mdunge to jail could be considered harsh for a white-collar crime.

“His position as a senior police officer who was expected to uphold the law probably influenced the judge’s decision. White-collar crime is a huge problem in this country, so the court wanted to make an example of him,” he said.

Burger said the questionin­g of the police’s credibilit­y, with officers being accused of corruption, might have also had an influence.

Qualificat­ion Verificati­on Services’ Danie Strydom said South Africa had excellent academic institutio­ns of higher learning, but they were being discredite­d by the increase in the number of cases in which people lied about their qualificat­ions.

“Faking a qualificat­ion is fraud and that makes it a crime. It should really be stamped out so that other countries can have confidence in the South Africans they employ,” he said.

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