The Mercury

Suspects in UKZN Med School scandal out on R40 000 bail

- Nosipho Mngoma

DURBAN restaurate­urs accused of selling spots to study at the University of KwaZuluNat­al’s medical school were granted R40 000 bail in the Pinetown Magistrate’s Court yesterday.

Varsha, 44, Hitesh Bhatt, 46, and co-accused Preshni Hiraman, 54, made a brief court appearance yesterday after their arrests by the Hawks on Friday.

The couple run a popular, internatio­nally rated restaurant, Little Gujarat, in the Durban CBD.

The trio face charges of corruption for allegedly selling spaces at the Nelson R Mandela School of Medicine and other health science places at the university for a fee of between R250 000 and R500 000.

The racket was exposed by The Mercury’s sister paper the Sunday Tribune.

Investigat­ion

Provincial National Prosecutin­g Authority spokeswoma­n Natasha Kara said the magistrate had granted bail of R40 000 each on condition that they surrender their passports, that they do not go to UKZN or leave Durban without the consent of the investigat­ing officer.

They were ordered not to interfere with the investigat­ion.

Hawks spokesman Captain Simphiwe Mhlongo said the police investigat­ion was ongoing and further arrests were imminent.

According to the Sunday Tribune the trio “are accused of working as agents in cahoots with a syndicate at UKZN to fraudulent­ly enrol students in the health science faculty and school of medicine”.

Evidence was seized in raids of their uMhlanga and La Lucia homes as well as at their restaurant. In February, The Mercury reported that UKZN vice-chancellor Dr Albert van Jaarsveld had called on the Hawks to investigat­e allegation­s of corruption at the medical school. This was in response to questions from the national higher education and training portfolio committee during the KZN leg of its probe into the state of universiti­es.

Van Jaarsveld told the committee that a KPMG forensic investigat­ion had identified serious issues which required police investigat­ion.

The university confirmed in June last year that it was investigat­ing a syndicate suspected of selling sought-after places at the medical school. It is believed that high-ranking academics and administra­tion staff are involved.

Van Jaarsveld told the Sunday Tribune that he had handed informatio­n against the syndicate to the Hawks.

UKZN had not responded to questions at the time of going to print last night.

Universiti­es South Africa chief executive Professor Ahmed Bawa welcomed the swift action against the alleged syndicate.

“South Africa’s 26 public universiti­es depend on their reputation for transparen­cy, for fairness, for their role in nation-building and in building the economy.

“How else can the knowledge that they produce and the students that they graduate be trusted?

“They are funded through the public purse and through the fees paid by students. It is of vital importance that any attempt – both from within the institutio­ns or without – to subvert the processes of selection and admission must be acted upon and eradicated,” Bawa said.

The matter will continue on August 31.

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