Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw Owusu
Friday, October 28, 2016
Two Ghanaian academics have waded into the controversy
surrounding what they call the ‘questionable’ doctoral degrees of the
disqualified All People’s Congress (APC) flag bearer, Hassan Ayariga.
They are also insisting that the Criminal Investigations
Department (CID) of the Ghana Police Service cannot gloss over a similar ‘fake’
doctorate degree allegedly conferred on the Inspector General of Police John
Kudalor, if the police have to investigate Hassan Ayariga who has been reported
by the Electoral Commission (EC).
The two dons, Prosper
Yao Tsikata, PhD (Assistant Professor of Communication) and A. Kobla Dotse, PhD
(Director, Chemical Research & Development) are saying that, looking at the
circumstances surrounding the issue, the CID might not even have the capacity
to investigate Hassan Ayariga.
Lingering Doubt
A statement
they jointly issued last week following publication about Ayariga’s certificate
stated, “The only lingering doubts in our minds about the CID expediting action
on this case are in multiple folds.
First, does the investigative arm of the
Ghana Police Service have the capacity to investigate this issue effectively?
This naturally leads to the second question. Even if they do, would the same
proceedings apply to its head, the IGP (Dr) John Kudalor?”
John
Kudalor reportedly travelled to the United States to pick the
degree from US-based Dayspring Christian University, a school not recognized by
Ghana’s National Accreditation Board (NAB).
He has since
been using the title, having organized a thanksgiving service for it.
The Dayspring Christian
University is one of four universities listed by NAB as not meeting the Board’s
accreditation criteria.
The Accreditation Board
subsequently warned the public against such universities after they have
conferred honorary degrees on some high-ranking individuals in the country.
According to Messrs
Prosper Yao Tsikata and A. Kobla Dotse, the time has come for the Minister of
Education, Prof. Jane Naana Opoku Agyemang, to act swiftly and “not sit back
and watch the education system get infiltrated with these fake degree holders,
especially those who are using the fake degrees to teach and get tenure and
promotions as professors in our universities.”
They said the NAB declared some institutions as
unaccredited and unworthy to issue higher degrees such as PhDs, but a
state-owned newspaper as well as prominent private radio stations celebrated such
individuals and their questionable awards saying, “What these institutions and
their managers fail to realize is the fact that the negative impacts these acts
have on our reward and honour systems can be far-reaching.”
Ayariga Analysis
Digging into Hassan Ayariga’s ‘fake’ degrees, the dons said, “In
our appraisals of materials on Ghanaians who flaunt questionable doctoral
degrees, we came upon the Great Achievers Institute of Theology and Seminary,
located in Spain. From available artifacts, (Dr. Dr.) Hassan Ayariga received a
doctorate degree (honoris causa) from this university. He also received a PhD
from the Atlantic International University in Hawaii.”
According to them, Hassan Ayariga insisted in radio and TV
interviews that he must be addressed a doctor, adding, “Since honorary
doctorate holders are not normally entitled to be referenced as such in public
communication, we turned our attention to his so-called earned PhD from the
Atlantic International University.
“Our view was that it must be the institution that gave him
the gravitas to insist on being addressed a doctor. However, this is where the
problem is. The NAB declares the Atlantic International University unaccredited
to confer doctoral degrees in Ghana. Rightly so, the Atlantic International
University is a diploma mill.”
Ayariga Admission
“Now, for (Dr. Dr.) Hassan Ayariga to turn round to say that
his PhD in Political Science was conferred on him by the Great Achievers
Institute of Theology and Seminary, we can only think of the inconsistency of
his own information, first, before delving into issues of accreditation, course
content, and the recognition he so badly needs to project himself politically.”
The dons said that while it was a step in the right direction
that the EC had referred the case to the CID, those canvassing for the reinstatement
of disqualified presidential candidates, including Hassan Ayariga, “should not
confuse (Dr. Dr.) Hassan Ayariga’s case with the others who might have
committed genuine errors in their application forms, a situation that can easily
be rectified by the courts.”
They asked the agitators to “steer clear of the Hassan
Ayariga case and allow the investigative wing of the Ghana Police Service to do
its job.”
Delusion
“With regard to the person (Dr. Dr.) Hassan Ayariga, it is
becoming clear that the man must be living in his own reality, a reality
constructed on a delusion of grandeur—a psychological state in which the victim
entertains false beliefs that he or she possesses superior qualities such as
genius, fame, omnipotence and wealth,” admitting that “this has only been
possible because he has been aided by media outlets that either lack the
capacity to research these issues before publication or carry out publications
that seek to celebrate what is questionable for economic gains.
“As we await the determination of the CID, we will also
urge the CID to contact the NAB or contact us if they need help in unraveling some of the hidden aspects of the issues of accreditation and the flaunting of
questionable degrees. We believe that the nature of the case, especially being
election-related requiring expeditious investigation and determination, will
set the stage for the police to begin to look into these issues of fraud. Our
investigative report has details about the various issues in it.”
Meanwhile, Hassan Ayariga has threatened to sue the EC
over the issue. The commission referred his case to the CID for investigation,
claiming that his educational certificate appears to be fake.
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