Wednesday, 27 May 2015

Pakistan detains Axact chief Shoaib Sheikh over 'fake degrees'

BBC News
Pakistani investigators have detained the head of a global internet technology firm suspected of an alleged multi-million dollar fraud selling fake university degrees online.
Axact's CEO Shoaib Sheikh and his deputy, Waqas Atiq, were taken into custody after a raid at their Karachi offices on Tuesday night.
Officials said hundreds of thousands of blank degree forms, student cards and authentication documents were found.
Axact has called the claims "baseless".
The Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) chief for Sindh province, Shahid Hayat, told media the agency had enough evidence to proceed against Mr Sheikh on charges of fraud, forgery, money laundering and violation of electronic transactions law.
The logo of the Axact company is seen after a raid by the Federal Investigation Agency in Rawalpindi on 19 May
Axact offices have been raided by investigators
Mr Sheikh was taken into custody 10 days after the International New York Timespublished allegations that the software firm based in Karachi was running a worldwide degree scam.
Raids took place at Axact offices in Karachi and Islamabad. Equipment was confiscated, records impounded and dozens of Axact employees were briefly detained for questioning.
The wider interest generated by the newspaper report in Pakistan is attributed to the fact the company was going to launch a well-promoted, high-profile print and electronic media group called Bol (Speak up), offering three to four times the market salaries to journalists it had hired.
A number of senior journalists who had been with Bol for several years, preparing for the launch, have now resigned from their positions.
Axact has strenuously denied the allegations against it.
On its website, it said last week: "Axact provides a comprehensive education management system that benefits diverse bodies of students and caters to all types of educational institutions - online and traditional.
"All 10 business units of Axact are completely legitimate, legal and committed to enhancing the quality of IT services across the world."
It has accused rival media groups to Bol of "campaigning" against it.
Mr Sheikh and Mr Atiq are expected to be produced in court on either Wednesday or Thursday, depending on how soon formal charges are drawn up.

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