In the media

In the media

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1-10 of 27 results

  • Newspaper

    KPK to formalize anti-corruption education in national curriculum

    Indonesia

    Press

    Diva Rifdah Rizkia P - Radio Republic Indonesia

    The Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) of Indonesia is set to embed anti-corruption education into the national curriculum. The idea is to break the current vicious cycle of corruption, where young people in their 20s and 30s are already committing acts of corruption. The idea is to foster a culture of integrity and ethical behaviour among future generations, and to reduce corruption through anti-corruption education from an early age.

  • Newspaper

    Anti-corruption education: NACP presented the education integrity development strategy for 2026–2030

    Ukraine

    Press

    - National Agency on Corruption Prevention

    To address corruption in Ukraine’s education sector, the National Agency on Corruption Prevention has held an event to publish its “Education Integrity Development Strategy for 2026–2030”. The campaign aims to instil a culture of honesty, transparency and ethical behaviour across all levels of education. It plans concrete reforms, including updating teaching materials and teacher training in integrity.

  • Newspaper

    Ministry of Education forms committee to investigate school book supply irregularities

    Kuwait

    Press

    Mona Al-Ahmad - Kuwait Times

    Kuwait’s Education Minister formed a committee to check for procurement irregularities and review 115 schoolbook printing and supply contracts for the 2025/2026 school year. The panel, comprising legal and Fatwa Department experts, will audit bids, exclusions, and deadlines, and will have one month to provide their findings and recommendations.

  • Newspaper

    Senegal: Exam fraud – parents and civil society call for reform

    Senegal

    Press

    Daouda Diouf - Le Soleil

    Recurring exam scandals in Senegal, including leaks of confidential test papers, have prompted parents and civil society to call for a deep reform of the education system. Experts cite corruption, weak digital security, and social pressures, recommending changes in curricula, ethics education, and legal enforcement.

  • Newspaper

    Gojek's Nadiem entangled in education corruption scandal

    Indonesia

    Press

    Ainur Rohmah - Asia Sentinel

    The procurement of over one million Chromebooks (2019–2022) has triggered a corruption probe into Indonesia’s Education Ministry. Losses are estimated at Rp1.98 trillion (approx. 121.4 million USD). At least 28 witnesses have been questioned, exposing transparency failures and underscoring the urgent need for stronger governance, accountability, and reforms in the education sector.

  • Newspaper

    First AI ethical code adopted to protect Arab values in HE

    Tunisia

    Press

    Wagdy Sawahel - University World News

    The Arab League adopted its first AI Ethics Charter to guide the integration of artificial intelligence (AI) in education and research across member states. It emphasizes data privacy, sustainability, and technological sovereignty, promotes open-source tools and ethical research, and calls for regional collaboration. The charter also recommends monitoring systems and national policies to support responsible and inclusive AI development in the Arab world.

  • Newspaper

    Education officials remanded in corruption case

    Pakistan

    Press

    - The News International

    In Rawalpindi, Pakistan, two education officials were remanded in a corruption case involving nearly Rs 10 million (about $45,000) meant for school supplies. They created fake purchase documents without proper tendering and approved payments without delivering any goods. Charges were filed under anti-corruption laws and the Pakistan Penal Code.

  • Newspaper

    Jinja principal education officer charged over UPE capitation grant

    Uganda

    Press

    Edward Anyoli - New Vision

    In Uganda, education officers face charges of abuse of office for diverting capitation grants originally used to purchase school materials. The penalty is up to 7 years in jail and a fine of Sh3.6 million (Kenyan shillings). This case highlights issues of mismanagement and misdirection in the allocation of educational funds.

  • Newspaper

    Textbooks’ embezzlement

    Pakistan

    Press

    - Dawn

    An official of the Basic Education Community Schools from South Punjab was caught selling around 3,500 textbooks. He also blackmailed teachers in Pakpattan and Okara into paying him between Rs1,000-Rs1,500 for the delivery of books to the education warehouse. Reports state teachers complained several times to relevant education authorities but received no response.

  • Newspaper

    R59 million schoolbooks fraud: EC education officials given trial date

    South Africa

    Press

    Siseko Gwegwe - The South African

    Four Eastern Cape Department of Education officials and a businessman are facing charges of corruption, fraud, theft, and contravention of the Public Finance Management Act for R59 million meant for schoolbooks. Under the pretence that schools were adequately resourced with textbooks, they decided without permission from the National Treasury to shift and use 80% of the budget for the procurement of supplementary resource material, mainly IT equipment and photocopiers.

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