These job slots were then sold to unsuspecting Nigerian job seekers, many of whom ended up stranded in the UK with no work and no means of survival.
Nigerian doctor and founder of CareerEdu, Dr Kelvin Alaneme, who was indicted for allegedly running a fraudulent operation, charging desperate migrants and job seekers multi-million for non-existent jobs in the UK care sector, has confirmed his engagement in relocation and job racketeering.
SaharaReporters earlier reported that secret recordings by the BBC captured Dr. Alaneme boasting about his operation.
Believing he was speaking to a potential business partner in the UK care industry, he offered her a role in his network, saying: “Just get me care homes. I can make you a millionaire.”
He said each job vacancy secured from a UK care home was worth £2,000 ($2,600), with an additional £500 ($650) commission.
How Nigerian Doctor Defrauded Desperate Migrants, Job Seekers Of Millions Of Naira In UK Relocation Scam —Report
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These job slots were then sold to unsuspecting Nigerian job seekers, many of whom ended up stranded in the UK with no work and no means of survival.
Under UK law, charging candidates for jobs is illegal. Yet, Dr. Alaneme openly admitted that desperate job seekers had no other option.
“They (the candidates) are not supposed to be paying because it's free. It should be free,” he acknowledged. But he justified the scam, adding: “They are paying because they know it’s most likely the only way.”
One victim, Praise, narrated his account of the ordeal. He paid over £10,000 ($13,000) to Alaneme, believing he had secured a job at a care company called Efficiency for Care in Clacton-on-Sea.
However, upon arrival, he discovered that the job was a lie.
“If I had known there was no job, I would not have come here. I came here to do a job,” he lamented, revealing that he was left on the verge of homelessness.
In a statement posted on his verified X (formerly Twitter) handle on Monday, Alaneme refuted claims of fraudulent activity but admitted engaging in job and relocation racketeering.
If the BBC really wanted to do a ‘real story’ - there are many individuals exploiting people, issuing fake COS, and outrightly scamming people and disappearing with their monies.
We have done none of this yet they maliciously insist on putting out this one-sided falsehood.
I…
— Dr. Kelvin Alaneme (@kelvin_alaneme) March 31, 2025
Alaneme insisted that COS issuance is free but noted that some employers and recruiters impose additional charges for training, transportation, and accommodation.
According to Alaneme, CareerEdu ensures clients are refunded in cases where placements are unsuccessful.
He stated that over 98% of their placed employees are currently working in the UK.
However, he acknowledged that in rare cases, some employers overstated their staffing needs, leading to job shortages for a few migrants.
CareerEdu, he claimed, worked to secure alternative employment at no extra cost.
While defending his company’s transparency, Alaneme accused the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) of publishing a misleading report.
Alaneme announced that his legal team is preparing to challenge the BBC report, which he described as defamatory.
He also reiterated that all payments received from affected job seekers were transferred to recruiters, with evidence available to support this claim.
The full statement read, “I am making this statement for all who have known me here and believe in the vision we have always shared.
“I have never scammed or defrauded anyone in my life. And I never will. Since we began in 2020, CareerEdu has helped over 5000 Nigerians relocate, not just to the UK but to other countries. We have services in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Oman, United States.
“We are not Care Job employers in the UK. We have always made this clear. Our job is to link qualified employees to legitimate and licensed employers and recruiters who do provide Certificate of Sponsorship.
“We have always made it clear that Certificate of Sponsorship is free. That said, some recruiters and employers charge some extra costs.
“These costs can cover training, transportation and even accommodation and varies from employer to employer.
“We do communicate this clearly to the clients and in the event that these clients are not successful, they do get a full refund of these extra costs, no questions asked.
“Our job as a linking company ends when the employee successfully comes into the UK and is handed over to the employer to commence training, DBS and other pre-employment routines.
“Every COS issued by employers to our clients were legitimate and they all relocated successfully.
“Over 98% of persons we have placed into employment are settled and working with their employers in the UK.
“We prepare these employees and ensure that the Healthcare workers that eventually come to the UK are ‘the best of the best’.
“There have been on very few occasions where the employers overstated their needs or recruited more persons that they had shifts for.
“On these few occasions, we do our best to find alternative employers in the UK for these clients at no extra costs. We also blacklist such employers and never send them candidates again.
“Last year, I was contacted by someone from Borderless who said she had access to employers.
“We were trying to become a direct recruitment agency so we can slash the ‘extra costs’ charged by recruiters and employers.
“The said company said they will take £2k which should cover for training, transportation costs. It sounded too good to be true compared to what was obtainable which explained why I was enthusiastic about it.
“I proposed that the agent will be compensated on a commission basis per person placed - a referral bonus - which is legal.
“Anyone who knows how commission payment works knows that there is no ceiling to how much the referrer can make.
“This was all there is to it, soundbites aside. The plan was simple, design a super-affordable package that will cover training, accommodation and make settling and assimilation easier for immigrant healthcare workers.
“When she came back that the client does not have shifts yet, I informed her that it will be difficult.
“A lot of our conversations surrounding this were cut to suit their agenda. It is our policy to be fully transparent to our clients and I told her we will inform any clients that these do not have hours yet.
“That said, they will still have 20 hours that they can do Care Jobs anywhere in the UK.
“Again, every single thing I have done both personally and through my company CareerEdu has been driven by the vision to provide global opportunities for young Nigerians starved by their countries of those opportunities.
“Since last year, we have slowed down on relocation because of the general anti-immigration climate globally.
“The exchange rate has not helped - average Nigerians can no longer even afford tuition abroad.
“When the BBC asked for my right of reply, I detailed every single thing that transpired, with evidence.
“My lawyers have been in touch and will advise on how we address this highly defamatory and misleading publication.
“For Praise, we presented evidence that every single dime he paid to us was transferred to the recruiter.
“He knows this, yet he is bent on tarnishing our hard-earned reputation. We will address this legally.
“If the BBC really wanted to do a ‘real story’ - there are many individuals exploiting people, issuing fake COS, and outrightly scamming people and disappearing with their monies.
“We have done none of this yet they maliciously insist on putting out this one-sided falsehood.
“I believe that the truth will win and posterity will vindicate the just.”
I am making this statement for all who have known me here and believe in the vision we have always shared. I have never scammed or defrauded anyone in my life. And I never will.
Since we began in 2020, CareerEdu has helped over 5000 Nigerians relocate, not just to the UK 🇬🇧 but… pic.twitter.com/CNAJaQ8iDF
— Dr. Kelvin Alaneme (@kelvin_alaneme) March 31, 2025