Notes from Atlanta:http://www.farooqkperogi.com/2011/06/ndi-okereke-onyiukes-fake-doctorate-and.html
Saturday, June 25, 2011
Ndi Okereke-Onyiuke’s Fake Doctorate and Professorship. By Farooq A. Kperogi (Notes from Atlanta)
I don’t want to be known as the guy who
 exposes or popularizes exposés on people’s forged qualifications. But 
when our reporters have shown themselves to be either unable or 
unwilling to bring to light cases of shockingly brazen and bizarre 
certificate forgeries in high places, it behooves those of us on the 
reportorial fringes but with knowledge of these frauds to fill the gap.
Early this month, the Nigerian diasporan online media were abuzz over the scandal of Ndi Okereke-Onyiuke’s fake doctorate degree
 on the basis of which she became so many things in Nigeria. The stories
 were accompanied by compellingly irrefutable documentary proofs of her 
culpability. Strangely, however, no Nigerian newspaper has touched the 
story with a ten-foot pole.
|  | 
| Ms. Ndi Okereke-Onyiuke | 
Essentially, it has been established that 
Okereke-Onyiuke’s claim to have earned a Ph.D. in business from the City
 University of New York (CUNY) in 1983 is fake. This shocking discovery 
was instigated by investigations into her other famous claim to have 
worked for years at the New York Stock Exchange (the world’s largest 
stock exchange) before returning to Nigeria in 1983. That claim has 
since been proven to be false as well.
In January this year, the (American) 
Securities and Exchange Commission sent a request to the City University
 of New York’s Graduate School asking to know if Okereke-Onyiuke indeed 
earned a Ph.D. in business from the school. The Director of Student 
Services and Senior Registrar of CUNY’s Graduate School, identified as 
Vincent J. De Luca, categorically said in a statement that she did not.
“On January 18, 2011, I caused a search to 
be conducted of our student records (including graduation records) at 
The Graduate Center, at the request of the United States Securities and 
Exchange Commission, to determine if Ms. Ndi Okereke–Onyiuke was ever 
enrolled in the Ph.D. Program in Business and if she received a Ph.D. in
 Business at The Graduate Center,” De Luca wrote in a sworn affidavit in
 New York.
“A thorough search of our electronic and 
paper files for the names, Ndi Leche Okereke, Ndi Okereke, Ndi Okereke –
 Onyiuke and Ndi Lechi Okereke – Onyiuke was conducted. No record was 
found that Ms. Ndi Okereke – Onyiuke ever enrolled in the Ph.D. Program 
in Business or received a Ph.D. in Business at The Graduate Center.”  
 (Click here to see the PDF file of the affidavit).
Even the authenticity of her bachelor’s 
degree is being called to question. A search in the database of the U.S.
 Department of Education and the Accrediting Commission of Career 
Schools and Colleges by a Nigerian online citizen media site found no record for the undergraduate school she claimed to have attended.
Given that all the things around which the 
social and intellectual basis of her legitimacy revolve have turned out 
to be fake—e.g. her claim to have worked at the New York Stock Exchange,
 her claim to have earned a Ph.D. in business, etc—I won’t be shocked if
 it turns out that, like Andy Uba,
 she actually does not even have a legitimate high school qualification.
 It would really be dismally dispiriting on so many levels if this were 
to be the case.
I now have no doubt that Nigeria is the 
safe haven for, and the world’s capital of, fakery in high places. Why 
wouldn’t it be when we have embraced and internalized a culture of 
glamorizing incompetence and mediocrity? All it takes to climb to the 
upper reaches of the social scale in Nigeria is to have the ability or 
luck to know the “right” people in the “right” places— and to be able to
 scheme and connive and bootlick. 
But, for me as an academic, the bigger 
scandal in all this is that the University of Nigeria Nsukka, one of our
 finest universities, actually awarded Okereke-Onyiuke a “professorship”
 in “capital market studies” in 2007 when, in fact, she has never had a 
full-time appointment with the university. Let’s even forget for now 
that her Ph.D. is fake. A professorship is not an honorary title that 
can be arbitrarily bestowed on people who pay for it—the way the 
honorary doctorate degree has become in Nigeria. A professorship is the 
highest-ranking position for a university academic, and people don’t get
 it unless they actually teach, research, and render services on a 
full-time basis in a university.
There are three main criteria to rise 
through the academic rank: teaching, research, and service. Since 
Okereke-Onyiuke has never taught at UNN and has no scholarly, 
peer-reviewed publications to her credit, she absolutely has no business
 being a professor. Awarding a professorship to her in spite of the 
obvious absurdity of doing so is the most scandalously grotesque 
profanation of that title I have ever encountered anywhere in the world.
Yes, there are several university 
professors in Nigeria who are not worthy of that title on the basis of 
their research output (which requires over 40 peer-reviewed scholarly 
articles in academic journals or at least two scholarly books published 
by reputable academic presses), but they at least actually teach—or 
taught—in a university and render(ed) services in various capacities in 
the universities as a matter of routine. After all, in the United 
States, there are people who become “full professors” (as Americans call
 professors) on the strength of their teaching alone. They are called 
“teaching professors” as opposed to “research professors.”
Okereke-Onyiuke’s only association with 
university teaching, according to her official bio, was when she taught 
“MBA, MBF and MSC classes” at the University of Lagos between 1995 and 
1997 as a part-time lecturer. (I pity the unfortunate students who had 
the misfortune to be taught by her). Interestingly, it is UNN, not 
UNILAG where she “taught” part time for two years, that conferred a 
“professorship” on her.
Well, now that it has come to light that 
Okereke-Onyiuke’s Ph.D. is fake and that her professional profile is 
willfully hyperbolized (to put it nicely), does UNN owe its students, 
staff, and alumni an apology for shamelessly desecrating the highest 
possible honor in academia by awarding it to an undeserving forger? 
But it’s not only Okereke-Onyiuke that UNN 
has awarded an unorthodox, unmerited professorship to. Dora Akunyili is 
another. Although she taught at the university for long, she left for 
public service when she was many ranks away from a professorship. 
Curiously, however, it was while she was officially away from teaching, 
research, and university service that she mysteriously skipped several 
ranks and became a “professor.” What’s really going on at UNN?
To be sure, it’s universal practice to 
appoint people with extensive industry experience (who may not even 
possess a Ph.D.) to professorships. In America, such people are called 
“professors of practice.” But in all cases, the professors of practice 
often resign from their jobs and become full-time employees of the 
university that appoints them to the position.
Given the multiple layers of dissimulation 
in Okereke-Onyiuke’s educational and work profiles, it’s obvious that 
she wasn’t worthy of being a professor of practice in any university, 
except we want to degenerate into teaching what she actually 
practiced—forgery.
 
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