Egypt’s recently appointed education minister, Mohamed Abdel Latif, finds himself embroiled in controversy, Middle East Eye reports on July 4th. Online fact checkers have revealed that his PhD, prominently featured in government promotional materials, appears to be in question for its authenticity.
On Wednesday, July 3rd, the new Egyptian government was sworn in following a reshuffle that retained the prime minister but altered 20 ministerial portfolios, including that of Mohamed Abdel Latif.
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The reshuffle is the first since President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi commenced his third six-year term in April 2024. The new cabinet will confront heavily debt-laden economy and energy crisis, but is anticipated to function as a rubber-stamp administration, following a decade of military rule consolidation dominated by Sisi supporters.
Abdel Latif’s CV, disseminated by the ministry and across all government media outlets, lists two postgraduate degrees from the US: a PhD from Cardiff City University and a master’s degree in education development from Lawrence University in 2012.
Hossam el-Hendy, Egyptian journalist and fact-checker, has questioned the authenticity of the PhD claimed by the new minister, who uses the title “doctor”. El-Hendy identified the university in the US as a “fake institution issuing counterfeit documents”, clarifying that it is not the renowned Cardiff University in the UK.
Fake universities are typically companies without campuses or faculty, granting non-accredited papers or certificates,
-the fact – checker wrote.