By Roy Denish.
A state-funded university has been drawn into a major corruption investigation following explosive allegations that examination papers were leaked, passing grades were sold for cash, and students who refused to comply with improper demands were deliberately failed. The complaint has also raised serious questions about whether senior administrators attempted to suppress the scandal and allow affected students to graduate without an internal inquiry.
Country’s anti-graft regulators has launched a sweeping investigation into allegations of systemic corruption, examination fraud, and cash-for-grades schemes within diploma programs at a state funded university.
The Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption initiated the probe following a formal, written complaint submitted by a group of students enrolled in the university’s Advanced Diploma in Management program.
According to the complaint, certain lecturers at the premier state institution routinely leaked examination question papers to favored students ahead of scheduled tests. The students leveled additional serious allegations detailing a well-organized racket where passing marks were sold to candidates in exchange for cash.
Conversely, the students alleged that faculty members actively retaliated against those who refused to comply with improper, non-academic demands by intentionally failing them on examinations.
The documentation submitted to investigators asserts that standard operating procedures, group project evaluations, and university-approved grading criteria were repeatedly violated at the personal discretion of specific lecturers.
The security of the grading system was further questioned by claims that several students who were initially failed were subsequently issued altered, passing results sheets after confronting the staff.
Compounding the core allegations of academic dishonesty, the student body accused high-ranking university administrators of actively trying to bury the matter. The complainants stated that university authorities rushed to award degrees and graduate the cohorts without conducting any internal disciplinary inquiries or formal reviews into the documented grievances.
Legal experts representing the student group noted that the described actions by university academics and administrators constitute punishable offenses under the provisions of the Bribery Act.
In their appeal to the Bribery Commission, the students urged the regulatory body to intervene immediately to restore structural accountability and protect the academic integrity of the state university’s diploma programs.
Commission officials have not publicly commented on the timeline of the ongoing investigation, and no formal charges have been announced.
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