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HomeGistUK-based Nigerian doctor filmed selling care jobs to foreigners

UK-based Nigerian doctor filmed selling care jobs to foreigners

A UK-based Nigerian doctor, Dr Kelvin Alaneme, was secretly filmed by the British Broadcasting Corporation in an undercover investigation, allegedly selling fake job opportunities to foreign nationals.

According to a BBC documentary, Dr Alaneme, a psychiatrist who had worked for the National Health Service, is the founder of CareerEdu, an agency based in Harlow, Essex.

The BBC stated that it launched its undercover investigation following a series of online complaints about his relocation services.

PUNCH Metro reports that selling jobs in the UK is illegal.

According to the report, CareerEdu describes itself as a “launchpad for global opportunities catering to young Africans” and claims to have 9,800 “happy clients.”

The investigation revealed that Dr Alaneme attempted to recruit the BBC journalist, believing she had strong connections in the UK care sector.

He was said to have offered the BBC undercover reporter a role as an agent for his business, promising she could make a fortune by securing care home vacancies.

“Just get me care homes. I can make you a millionaire,” he was quoted as saying.

The BBC report stated, “As a potential business partner, our journalist was then given unprecedented insight into how immigration scams by agents like Dr Alaneme actually work.

“Dr Alaneme said he would pay £2,000 ($2,600) for each care home vacancy she was able to procure and offered £500 ($650) commission on top.”

Alaneme allegedly planned to sell the vacancies to candidates in Nigeria.

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“They [the candidates] are not supposed to be paying because it’s free. It should be free,” he said in hushed tones. “They are paying because they know it’s most likely the only way.”

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One of the victims, a Nigerian man in his mid-30s known as Praise, claimed he paid Dr Alaneme over £10,000 ($13,000) for a job in the UK.

“I was told I was going to be working with a care company called Efficiency for Care, based in Clacton-on-Sea,” he recounted.

However, upon arrival, he discovered the job did not exist.

“If I had known there was no job, I would not have come here,” he said. “At least, back home in Nigeria, if you go broke, I can find my sister or my parents and go and eat free food. It’s not the same here. You will go hungry.”

Praise said he repeatedly messaged Efficiency for Care and Dr Alaneme for months, asking when he could start work. Despite assurances from Dr Alaneme, the job never materialised.

The BBC investigation found discrepancies in Efficiency for Care’s employment records.

The report revealed, “Efficiency for Care employed, on average, 16 people in 2022 and 152 in 2023.

“Yet, a letter from the Home Office to the company, dated May 2023 and seen by the BBC, showed it had issued 1,234 Certificates of Sponsorship to foreign workers between March 2022 and May 2023.”

In another secretly recorded meeting, Dr Alaneme detailed an even more sophisticated scam involving sponsorship documents for nonexistent jobs.

“The advantage of having a CoS that is unconnected to a job,” he said, “is that you can choose any city you want,” he added.

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