POLITICS: The Case of Varun Gandhi and the Fake Degrees

At just 29 years old, Varun Gandhi is widely regarded as a rising star in
his political party, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). The BJP, which could
sweep to power in India’s upcoming national elections when the results are
announced on May 16th, is a Hindu nationalist party with a history of
anti-Muslim rhetoric.


 Recently Gandhi caused uproar when he was caught on tape using such
rhetoric. In the aftermath it was discovered that he had lied about academic
credentials from the *London School of Economics (LSE)* and the *School of
African and Oriental Studies (SOAS)*, both constituent colleges of the
University of London.

The young Gandhi is an asset to the BJP because he is a high-level defector.
His family is a political dynasty in the Congress Party, the secularist
party currently holding on to power with a thin majority in the Lok Sabha
(lower house of parliament). His aunt Sonia Gandhi is currently leader of
the Congress. Additionally, his grandmother is the late former Prime
Minister Indira Gandhi (Congress) and his great grandfather, Jawaharlal
Nehru, was the first Prime Minister of India (Congress). After a family
feud, Gandhi and his mother joined the BJP in 2004. (He explains his
conversion to the BJP in a 2005 interview with the BBC.)

In contrast to his usually soft demeanor when speaking to the media in
English, Gandhi recently made a series of fiery Hindi speeches in Pilibhit,
Uttar Pradesh, where he is the BJP’s candidate for the Lok Sabha. In them he
threatens violence against Muslims, saying for example that after the
election the “Lotus Hand” (the BJP’s emblem) would cut the throats of the
“circumcised.”


 That is of course a derogatory reference to Muslims that has more or less
the same effect as the ‘N’-word in American politics.


Gandhi has been censured by the national Electoral Commission and was
arrested on March 28th on charges of inciting communal violence.The BJP
issued a statement “dissociating” itself from Gandhi’s comments but
affirming that he remains its candidate for Pilibhit.



The lack of any apology on Gandhi’s part angered a number of people, who
gathered signatures for a petition allowing alumni of the *LSE* and
*SOAS*to condemn the remarks of their fellow-alumnus Varun Gandhi. The
only
problem is, as Raghu Karnad discovered, that Gandhi is not really an alumnus
of either institution. He was never officially part of the student body at
the LSE (rather he participated in a distance learning program after having
been denied admission to the normal course) and he dropped out of SOAS
before receiving the M.Sc. he claimed he had earned. This has now been
confirmed by officials at both colleges. Karnad wrote a piece in *Outlook
India* arguing that Varun Gandhi is the antithesis of the liberal values of
LSE and SOAS.

Unfortunately for Gandhi, he made these claims in a court petition, which
means that he could be charged with perjury. Still, his exaggerations are
not as bad as other recent blow ups around the world:

   - Ali Kordan, a long-serving Interior Minister of Iran, was forced out of
   the government after his Oxford doctorate was exposed as an absurdly crude
   fake (having been issued by the non-existent “London Oxford University”) and
   he attempted to bribe MPs not to impeach him.


   - A few years ago, Mamata Banerjee, veteran politician, who was a cabinet
   minister in Indian Government for many years, claimed to have a doctorate
   from “East Georgia University,” which is no more real than London Oxford
   University.


   - H. James Wasser, the Superintendent of Public Schools in Freehold, NJ
   was recently discovered to have bought a fake PhD.


But why did they do it, asks the *Times of India*. In Gandhi’s case, the
mention of the degrees was ironically in a court filing which presented his
(false) academic qualifications as evidence that he was an upstanding
citizen. Perhaps others do it for reasons of pride.


People are able to perpetrate such frauds because the entire system of
academic qualifications runs mostly on trust and much less on government
inspection. That trust is often broken: India’s University Grants Commission
has published a list of 22 fake universities in India that issue degrees
without accreditation. In the United States, such organizations are known as
“diploma mills” (click the link for the *NYT*’s account of one egregious
example) and are able to flourish because the national Department of
Education does not accredit universities. Thus, in states where there are
not stringent laws regulating how academic qualifications are granted,
almost anyone can start printing degrees.


And then of course there is the problem of honorary degrees, which is big
business since universities often reward donors by giving them an honorary
PhD. Of course, one is supposed to always mention that the degree is
honorary but being called “Dr So-and-So” has an allure.


The issue of Varun Gandhi’s academic qualifications and his anti-Muslim
attitudes are two different matters, but both involve a similar deception.
In the 2005 BBC interview mentioned above, Gandhi claims to have seen no
“minority-bashing” in the BJP, and yet here he is five years later,
unmistakably doing just that.


So, are Indians simply so hung up about a 'phoren' degree they want one even
though they have no claim to it? Is this proof we love all things 'phoren'?
Or do we have a talent and aptitude for deception and fakery?


"Foreign things have a status value which the swadeshi doesn't," says social
scientist Shiv Vishwanathan. In other words, another instance of our love of
the foreign tag, a colonial hangover.

More important, when people tom-tom degrees from non-existent universities,
it should be seen as an "appeal to an intellect they don't possess", adds
Vishwanathan.

Dipankar Gupta, professor of *sociology* at Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru
University says that "a degree from either the UK or the US matters a lot
(to) people in the developing world". But he adds that any dispassionate
analysis shows "that some international universities are superior to ours
and it helps to study there. But for many, it's not about acquiring
knowledge, it's about showing off."

It is a platitude that India still prizes education above most other
attributes. A highly qualified person commands more respect than one
without. This increases manifold if the degree is from, say Oxford or
Cambridge.


Sometimes, discovery of a *fake degree* can save lives. A few years ago,
police caught 'Dr' Vikramjeet Singh, who claimed a degree from the
Karanganda Medical Institute in Kazakhastan. He was employed by a Delhi
hospital.


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