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Submit your Research - Make it Global News🚨 Latest Enforcement Actions in the Crackdown
In a bold move to safeguard prospective students, South Africa's Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET) has escalated its nationwide campaign against bogus colleges. Just days ago, on March 19, 2026, Deputy Minister Dr. Mimmy Gondwe led unannounced inspections at two institutions in the Mankweng area near Polokwane, Limpopo: College of Africa and Pentagon College. These visits revealed serious compliance issues, including the offering of unaccredited programmes and operations beyond the scope of their registrations.
Pentagon College was found enrolling up to 1,000 students in unaccredited courses, with annual fees reaching R26,000 per student. College of Africa was delivering in-house programmes without proper accreditation, including outdated N1-N3 qualifications that are being phased out nationally. Dr. Gondwe issued a strict seven-day ultimatum: comply fully or face immediate shutdown. "You can’t call yourself a college anymore because there’s a phasing out of N1–N3. That means you’re a skills provider and you can’t call yourself College of Africa. We give you a week to get your things in order, or we are going to shut down these colleges," she declared.
This Limpopo operation follows a pattern of aggressive enforcement. Earlier, on February 20, 2026, the National Computer College (NCC) in Randburg, Johannesburg, was forcibly closed after officials discovered it was peddling unaccredited computer literacy programmes like Microsoft and Certiport courses. Previously registered for now-phased-out N1-N3 levels, NCC had about 30 students paying up to R1,000 monthly—totaling R8,000 to R12,000 per person for worthless certificates.
On March 3, another intergovernmental team, including DHET, South African Police Service (SAPS), Home Affairs, and Employment and Labour officials, targeted Pretoria's CBD in Tshwane for oversight visits, building on the Randburg success.
Defining Bogus Colleges: Unregistered and Unaccredited Risks
Bogus colleges in South Africa, also known as fake or unregistered private higher education institutions, are entities operating without official DHET registration or offering qualifications not accredited by recognized bodies like the South African Qualifications Authority (SAQA) or QCTO. Legitimate private colleges must appear on DHET's official registers: one for private higher education institutions (HEIs) offering degrees and diplomas, and another for private colleges focused on vocational or occupational training.
Many bogus operations exploit the phasing out of the old NATED (National Accredited Technical Education Diploma) N1-N3 programmes, which transitioned to QCTO occupational qualifications. Institutions clinging to these outdated labels mislead students into believing they provide credible post-matric education. Common red flags include flashy marketing promising quick certifications, suspiciously low fees for 'degrees,' lack of physical campuses, and no verifiable DHET certificate displayed prominently.
- No listing on DHET's register of private colleges or HEIs.
- Qualifications not searchable on SAQA's database.
- Pressure to pay upfront without contracts or refunds policies.
- Unknown or foreign-sounding accreditations not linked to SAQA.
- High student-to-lecturer ratios with unqualified staff.
These institutions prey on vulnerable matriculants from low-income backgrounds, where youth unemployment hovers around 45%, making any 'qualification' seem like a lifeline.
The Widespread Scale and Historical Context
South Africa has approximately 146 registered private higher education institutions, but the shadow of bogus colleges looms large. DHET updates its registers regularly, with the latest private colleges list released on January 23, 2026. While exact numbers of active bogus entities fluctuate, enforcement campaigns have shuttered over 50 since 2016, including high-profile cases like Damelin branches and City Girls College.
The problem surged post-2010 with increased post-school demand amid limited public university spaces—over 500,000 qualified applicants rejected annually. Bogus colleges fill this gap illicitly, enrolling thousands. In 2025 alone, DHET issued notices to deregister three prominent private colleges for non-compliance, signaling intensified scrutiny.
Historically, lax oversight allowed hundreds to proliferate; a 2004 DHET list identified 200+ bogus names. Today's crackdowns reflect lessons learned, prioritizing multi-agency interventions to dismantle operations swiftly.
Heartbreaking Student Impacts and Victim Stories
The human cost is staggering. In Randburg, student Lisette Kalunga, enrolled since December 2025 in a six-month course, fumed over her R6,000 investment: "If it's not accredited, I want my money back." Fellow learner Keamogetswe Khalo, aiming for pilot training, faced a R12,000 hit for a 12-month office skills programme that barred further studies.
At Pentagon College, 1,000 students risk losing tens of millions in fees for unendorsed diplomas. Families often sell livestock or assets to fund these scams, deepening poverty cycles. Fake qualifications fail SAQA verification, blocking jobs—even entry-level ones requiring NQF Level 4 certificates. A 2023 University World News analysis highlighted how false credentials erode workforce productivity, inflate hiring costs, and damage employer trust in South African qualifications.
Broader ripple effects include stalled career progression; a nurse with a bogus diploma can't register with the South African Nursing Council, perpetuating skills shortages in critical sectors like healthcare and IT.
Photo by Pawel Janiak on Unsplash
Government's Robust Multi-Stakeholder Strategy
Minister Buti Manamela oversees DHET's comprehensive response, with Deputy Gondwe spearheading operations. Teams comprise DHET inspectors, SAPS for raids, Home Affairs for immigration checks (many bogus colleges exploit foreign students), and Labour Department for wage compliance. Quality councils—SAQA, QCTO, Council on Higher Education (CHE)—verify programmes on-site.
Awareness campaigns coincide with matric results and NSFAS (National Student Financial Aid Scheme) applications, using radio, social media, and school visits. DHET's helpdesk resolves 55,000+ queries yearly on legitimacy.
Step-by-Step Guide to Verifying Institutions
Empowering students is key. Here's how to confirm legitimacy before enrolling:
- Visit DHET Registers for private HEIs and colleges lists (updated 2026).
- Search SAQA's database for qualification accreditation.
- Request the original DHET registration certificate (not a copy).
- Check QCTO/SETA for occupational programmes.
- Contact DHET helpline (0800 87 2222) or email registrations@dhet.gov.za.
Provisional registrations are temporary; full status requires programme audits. Always sign contracts detailing refunds and accreditation.
Long-Term Economic and Social Ramifications
Bogus colleges exacerbate South Africa's 32.9% unemployment (Stats SA, Q4 2025), with graduates holding fake papers competing unfairly. Employers spend millions verifying credentials, per a LexisNexis report estimating R3.64 indirect cost per fraud rand.
NSFAS losses from ghost students at bogus sites—R260m monthly in past scandals—strain public funds meant for legitimate access.
Remedies and Support for Victims
Affected students: demand full refunds for fees and materials within 7 days. Escalate to small claims court (up to R20,000) or Consumer Goods and Services Ombud. Transfer credits if partial accreditation exists via CHE processes. NSFAS appeals open for reallocation to registered providers.
DHET's recovery teams assist; report via WhatsApp 087 095 0620. Legitimate alternatives abound: public TVETs, universities, or registered privates like Boston City Campus.
Photo by Julia Fiander on Unsplash
Looking Ahead: Reforms and New Opportunities
DHET eyes stricter digital verification via a national portal by 2027, plus AI monitoring of ads. New institutions like Ekurhuleni University promise expanded capacity. For career-seekers, focus on accredited paths aligns with SA's 4IR push.
This crackdown signals commitment to quality higher education, protecting dreams from exploitation. Stay vigilant—your future depends on it.
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