Zimbabwe arrests over Grace Mugabe's 'fake' PhD
CGTN
["africa"]
Zimbabwean anti-corruption investigators said on Friday they had arrested a university professor over the suspected fraudulent awarding of a doctorate to former first lady Grace Mugabe.
Levi Nyagura, the vice chancellor of the University of Zimbabwe, was arrested by the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission following an investigation into the PhD.
It emerged that Grace was awarded the degree by the university in 2014 after just months of study.
 Zimbabwe first Lady Grace Mugabe waves as she arrives to address  worshipers and congregants from various indigenous church denominations at a religious gathering rally organized by the ruling party Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (Zanu PF) in Harare Youth Province, Nov. 5, 2017. /VCG Photo‍ 

 Zimbabwe first Lady Grace Mugabe waves as she arrives to address  worshipers and congregants from various indigenous church denominations at a religious gathering rally organized by the ruling party Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (Zanu PF) in Harare Youth Province, Nov. 5, 2017. /VCG Photo‍ 

Doctorates typically require several years of full-time research and writing.
"Nyagura has been arrested. We cannot have people who award fake degrees," Goodson Nguni, a commissioner from ZACC, said.
The professor will be charged with abuse of office, he said, refusing to say whether Grace also faces arrest.
Grace Mugabe's apparent desire to succeed her 93-year-old husband prompted the army takeover that saw Robert Mugabe ousted from power in November last year.
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A copy of the 226-page doctoral thesis, titled "The Changing Social Structure and Functions of the Family" was only published last month following public calls for Grace to be stripped of her PhD.
Critics had argued that Grace, 52, had not actually studied or undertaken research to earn the doctorate.
She was personally capped by then-president Mugabe, who was also the chancellor of the university.
Source(s): AFP