A professor was removed from his post at China's prestigious
Tsinghua University earlier this month for faking his academic
achievements and work experience.
China's Ministry of Education confirmed this on Monday and Wang
Xuming, the ministry's spokesman, said: "According to China's law
on higher education, colleges and universities are empowered to
employ and dismiss personnel."
In November 2005, Fang Zhouzi, who is known for exposing academic
scandal in China, claimed that professor Liu Hui of Tsinghua
University had listed a paper by a US-based professor with similar
initials, namely "Liu H", in his resume when he applied for a job
at the university's college of medicine.
Fang also questioned the validity of Liu's claim that he had
previously been a director of a research center with a US-based
medical school between 1999 and 2004. Fang alleged that although
Liu had worked in a laboratory in the US, he was not a leader of
any kind.
Liu, who was accepted by Tsinghua in June 2004, admitted that the
paper was not his own, but denied any wrongdoing blaming a misprint
by the library's data retrieval system.
After further investigation, university authorities decided to sack
47-year-old Liu on March 10, according to the university's two
relevant regulations on academic fraud and staff management.
The Ministry of Education has decided to enhance academic
discipline by setting up a special commission to monitor academic
fraud and plagiarism in the near future. But no decision has been
made on when this will be done.
(Xinhua News Agency March 28, 2006)