Editorial: Height of fraud

The falsification of qualifications is nothing new. However in an ever-more high technology world, where considerable skills must be combined with detailed knowledge and understanding, those who seek to cheat the system by claiming professional fitness that they do not possess, are a criminal menace.

This truth has been starkly underlined by the discovery in China that at least 200 commercial airline pilots have lied about their level of experience. The Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) began re-checking pilot qualification after a fatal crash last month in which 42 people died. Preliminary investigation suggests that during the final approach the pilot had made a series of elementary errors which caused the airliner to miss the runway completely and smash.

The fact that half the improperly qualified pilots so far unmasked have been working for the same Chinese airline, ought to heighten the alarm for both the CAAC and passengers. This is because it would seem to suggest that there has been either systemic deception or that the carrier involved has been unacceptably lax in its recruitment procedures.

It is indeed bad enough to have anyone lie about their qualifications. It is even less acceptable to have employers connive in hiring individuals who they have good reason to believe are frauds.

Unfortunately here in the Kingdom, we are no strangers to the problem of bogus professional qualifications. In January this year the Saudi Commission for Health Specialties revealed that some 15,000 foreigners who had been working with the health system had been barred, either for incompetence or because their qualifications were phony or otherwise invalid. This last group numbered more than a thousand. Some 600 of these fakes were nurses or pharmacists, both highly specialized callings in which proper training and qualification can only be acquired over several years. But astoundingly there were also 150 bogus dentists and opticians and a horrifying 75 fake doctors.

These people had the lives and well-being of thousands of patients in their untrained and incompetent hands. How many unfortunate people died because of misdiagnosis or suffered unnecessarily because of inappropriate treatments can only be guessed.

The medical institutions that hired these cheats must bear some responsibility in that the initial interviews were perhaps not sufficiently probing. Moreover checks on the qualifications and the taking up of references ought to have exposed the deceptions. This said, however, technology makes forging qualifications relatively easy. In addition anyone intent on passing themselves off in the world of medicine may well have had experience in low-status hospital jobs, picking up enough of the jargon to pass cursory inspection when pretending to be a doctor.

There is of course another aspect to this scandalous behavior. All over the world young people are scrimping and saving to get through college and qualify as real doctors, real airline pilots, real engineers, real specialists, whose skills and knowledge will constitute a major contribution to society. The despicable ploys of the cheats with bogus qualifications are an insult to all the hard work and application being demonstrated by these bona fide and admirable students.

Comments

GOWHER

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Of course the government of saudi arabia must scrutinize the qualification especially health related profession, Here in dammam medical dispensary i am sure those hire doctors from kerala are all fraud, They are prescribing homeopathic medicine for their commission.

ACHA BAI

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There are many of them around. The irony of the matter is that recognition of the individual output at work is at the zero level. What most people appreciate is the degees or certificate. In most cases, you are nothing if you are not a "doctor", you are not respected if you are not a doctor. In the West People are respected on the basis of who they are and their degrees.

MOHAMMED ABDUL SHUAIEB

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assalam walikum dear brother you muslims in saudi ask opinion, i request you to shed some light upon poor muslims of india, dear brother i stay in bellary district of karnataka state of india, alhamdulillah here we have tableegh jam'aat mosque opposite to my house but the people (mutualli) & others who are a part of the mosque, i dont know why they dont fear ALLAH, they bring in black magicians in mosque at night & perform some black magic rituals in the mosque premises, can you imagine black magic in mosque premises, & they say that by doing this because they muslims & people of other castes will stay united, if not there will be bloodshed everywhere, you tell me whether our prophet S.A.W teach this to us, islam in this is ruined & people from saudi & other places send billions of dinars & dollars to these places as fundsm, they misuse it first & secondly they perform haraam in the mosques, please for the sake of ALLAH bring this topic to to notice to alims over there, as a muslim it is your duty to spread truth, if you believe in ALLAH s.t & his MESSENGER s.a.w please forward this in your newspaper, if you cant atleast forward this news to alims over there, thak you, khudahafiz.

YINDIAN

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no doubt Yindian qualifications should be thoroughly checked...

AJIT

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Qualifications of every body needs to be checked irrespective of nationality. Every body knows which country most of the fraudsters live in.
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