Angelica _ann wrote:maka wrote:Njung'e wrote:Joho now disowns the C+ certificate and says his is the D Minus one. The can of worm is now open and anybody can smell what's coming from it. Now, he need no further pushing. Anyone can go to court and demand that all his ndigiris be recalled/nullified. Well..........now i know why my late Grandma used to compare fools with beehives!
The challenges against Johos degree failed all the way to the supreme court and are therefore legally spent or res-judicata.His degree must be nullified first before he is disqualified and by law its only the awarding university that can revoke a degree...I can bet anyone 100k that Joho will win this case hands down and will be on the ballot on the 8th of August...Ni hayo tu...Ohhh had forgetten plus the forgery claim is also a legal non starter...
Dont spoil the fun preeeshhhhh
Kampala University is about to recall that degree since he used the fake certificate to get there. No EA university admits D- students. Ata polytechnic wanataka D.
There's evidence that Joho arrived in Uganda on an unknown date but departed on 5th July 2006. He never visited Uganda until Feb 2009, everyone can guess that was to collect his makaratasi. The Kampala uni papers were at first for a diploma cert. He registered at UON and realized that he would not complete his degree b4 2013 so he conspired with Kampala again arguing that he was transferring credits from UON to Kampala.
The Higher education authority in UG noted that Hassan Joho could not have transferred credits from the University of Nairobi to Kampala University in the said period because he was admitted to Kampala University in August 2009.
How would the transfer be possible and yet Joho informed the High Court of Kenya that he was admitted to UoN in September 2009 (as compared to admission to Kampala University in August 2009)?
In 2010, Joho is said to have sat for at least 17 course units in Uganda. The immigration records in Kenya and Uganda show that Ali Hassan Joho, a Kenyan citizen of ID number 11457905, visited Uganda only once in February 2010.
"There are only two emotions in the market, hope & fear. The problem is you hope when you should fear & fear when you should hope: - Jesse Livermore
.