Private universities found exploiting loopholes for part-time admissions
This year, admissions to first-year part-time programs were suspended across both public and private universities in Uzbekistan. In response, some private universities have allegedly ramped up illicit admissions to second-, third-, fourth-, and even fifth-year part-time study programs. According to legal expert Khushnudbek Khudoyberdiev, 26,000 students have been added to the part-time study track in the HEMIS system since the beginning of the year – 4,800 of them concentrated in just two private universities.
Social media ads offer illegal admissions to higher years
Open advertisements offering admissions to second- and third-year part-time programs have been circulating on social media. Khudoyberdiev, a lawyer and blogger, conducted an investigation by posing as a potential client.
His findings reveal the following:
- Various consulting firms claim they can arrange part-time admissions to the second, third, fourth, or even fifth year of university.
- Over 50 different academic programs are offered, all at private institutions.
- Prospective students are given a list of over 10 private universities and told to choose one.
- The service fees charged by these firms range from UZS 10 million to UZS 30 million depending on the program, while tuition fees must be paid separately by the student. The firm’s fee is for its “services” only.
- A fake academic transcript is produced in the student’s name, claiming they previously studied at a university in Russia, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, or Kazakhstan. However, the student is not shown this document.
- Using this fake document, the student is “transferred” into an upper-year part-time program at a private university in Uzbekistan. The university then issues a contract, and once the tuition is paid, the student begins studies in the second, third, fourth, or even fifth year – as though everything were legitimate.
“This process likely involves the universities themselves,” Khudoyberdiev wrote. “A respectable institution would verify a student’s documents and would never accept forged credentials. But when faced with a client ready to pay millions in tuition, universities are becoming active participants in this corrupt scheme.”
“They don’t just place you in a university – they also backdate your entry into the ministry’s HEMIS system. But first, they require full payment of the tuition,” he added.
Tens of thousands added to the system despite official restrictions
According to Khudoyberdiev’s data, between January 1 and July 3, 2025, a total of 41,812 students were registered in the HEMIS system, with 25,821 of them added to part-time programs.
“How is this even possible? Is no one monitoring this?” he questioned.
He further noted that one private university admitted 3,200 students into its third- and fourth-year programs during this period, while another institution added 1,599 students to upper-year levels in HEMIS.
“What is this mystery, folks? It’s like something out of a ‘daylight murder’ story – a crime committed in broad daylight, and we’re all just spectators? Strange… Very strange,” Khudoyberdiev concluded.
Kun.uz has reached out to the press service of the Ministry of Higher Education for comment on the situation.
It is worth recalling that from this academic year onward, admissions to part-time study programs have been officially suspended. This rule applies equally to both public and private universities.
At the same time, students already enrolled in part-time programs will continue their education in that format until graduation, following established procedures.
Related News
17:57 / 15.06.2026
British Council marks nearly 30 years in Uzbekistan, highlights growing focus on quality in higher education
12:23 / 15.06.2026
Central Bank to fine banks for ATM service failures under new consumer protection rules
12:17 / 15.06.2026
Uzbekistan considers annual environmental fee for vehicles older than 30 years
15:08 / 13.06.2026