- A moving joke… - 22nd July 2025
- Torode to nowhere part two - 21st July 2025
- Torode to nowhere part one - 18th July 2025

The controversial head of a Welsh university has secured a new high-powered job, despite the fact that a huge number of internal sources told The Eye of how unhappy they were at the way her previous institution was run.
At crisis-hit Cardiff Metropolitan University (CMU) there was allegedly a “list of The Disappeared”, and a “culture of fear”, with another saying the person was “too frightened to talk” publicly,
Contentious Cara Aitchison was in charge at the university, but is now to become the head of the Scottish Funding Council (SFC), yet academics in Wales have greeted the new appointment with dismay.
The SFC say proudly: “The Minister for Higher and Further Education has announced that Professor Cara Aitchison has been appointed as Chair of the Scottish Funding Council. Professor Aitchison has been Interim Co-Chair since April 2025, working alongside Deputy Chair, Lorna Jack.
“Professor Aitchison has had a distinguished academic career holding senior leadership roles in Scotland, the wider UK, and internationally – including over a decade as a successful university principal in England and Wales. She is an Honorary Professor at the University of Edinburgh’s Moray House School of Education, where she was previously Head of School, and Professor Emerita in Geography and Cultural Economy at Cardiff Metropolitan University where she was previously President and Vice-Chancellor.”

The press release announcing the headline-grabbing news goes on to say: ‘Commenting on Professor Aitchison’s appointment, Higher and Further Education Minister, Graeme Dey, said “Professor Aitchson brings with her extensive knowledge and experience and I am confident that she is absolutely the right appointment to lead the board of the Scottish Funding Council.
‘Welcoming the appointment, Francesca Osowska, Chief Executive of the Scottish Funding Council, said: “I am very much looking forward to working with Cara as our new Chair and join the other members of the Board and SFC staff in welcoming her to the role. Her wide understanding of tertiary education and research will be a huge asset to the Scottish Funding Council, as will her track-record of business partnership.”
One of the bemused academics puzzled by the appointment (who is also an official with the University and College [UCU]), said to The Eye; “This is just incredible after everything that’s happened. Do they not know what took place at Cardiff met?”.
A whistleblower at the troubled organisation in Wales, has declared: “There’s a…mystery Deputy Vice-Chancellor that never was, (on the list are) John Cavani and Lisa Newberry (both working in Marketing), Leigh Robinson (Pro Vice Chancellor) Sharon Johnstone and Leila Gouran (International), Paul Robinson (Estates), Christine Fraser (University Secretary) and her PA Angela Jones-Evans. All people that had to work close(ly with) the VC (Vice-Chancellor) (who are) suddenly no longer around”.

This message to us added that there was an: “…unremitting slide down the league tables (with) shocking NSS (National Student Survey) and REF (Research Excellence Framework) results. The worst thing is that there is no plan that I can see to make improvements for the student experience, no plan to get the teaching quality scores up again. Nothing.”.
It was claimed that critics within CMU who leave are ‘gagged’ using legal ‘Non-disclosure agreements’.

The contact informed us: “All this is happening when our students are really suffering and are dropping out, saddling themselves with debt for 40 years”.
One of the officials on the alleged list (John Cavani) has an interesting past which was highlighted by our journalists.
Mr Cavani was a “Senior Marketing & Communications Professional” at CMU, and said in a recent social media announcement that he had “decided to move on”, but before he did so, he had attempted to use his Public Relations (PR) skills on our Editor, Welshman Phil Parry, by trying to persuade him to report ‘positive’ stories about the university.

Mr Cavani also failed to respond to a gmail marked “urgent” asking for information, even though he claims to be a specialist in communications.
CMU itself has a contentious past, too, which was alluded to by the unknown internal informant.
It was ranked 108th in The Times and The Sunday Times Good University Guide 2019–which meant it had plunged 18 places in only a year, and another of our sources at the time, said it had “nose dived”.
CMU, though, has proclaimed it soon improved, and has announced that it “was recently awarded the title of Welsh University of the Year 2021 by The Times and The Sunday Times”.
However an incorrect advert has been published, inviting applications for a Deputy Vice-Chancellor (DVC) for CMU explaining that it was for Cardiff University (CU), using THAT institution’s logo and photograph.
Documents also paint an alarming picture of what is happening inside CMU, showing that, as well as publishing the wrong notice for a new senior staff member, the institution has acknowledged, too, it needs to do more in allowing internal critics to speak out (presumably including our anonymous contact). Minutes of a “SPECIAL MEETING OF THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS” given to The Eye, stated clearly that the university sought to “explicitly strengthen the University’s commitment to freedom of speech and academic freedom”. This then became official policy at CMU, with the declaration: “The Board Resolved. 1) To approve the proposed Code of Practice on Freedom of Speech”.
The latest worrying information is set against other disturbing details, after we were contacted by numerous academics at CMU, that leading officials who have oversight of the institution are “turning a blind eye even though a grievance has gone straight to them”, our journalists also received complaints that the fresh people who were brought in were of low calibre.

Following a meeting of the Vice-Chancellor Executive Group (VCEG), unhappy staff were sent recruitment rules that every appointment panel must be chaired by a member of the group or a Dean of another school at the crisis-hit university.
Yet, another whistleblower at CMU, said this was just further evidence of “more controlling and lack of trust”. One source added that it had become crazy at the institution once more, saying: “It’s starting to go mad again”. The contact told The Eye earlier: “I can’t wait for the REF results … Research across the university is at an all time low”.

A spoof Twitter account was created which was widely followed by staff at CMU, and The Eye have shown previously how another source at CMU told us the atmosphere there was “feverish”, while more than two and a half times the amount of money had been spent on legal fees compared with the year before, and the astonishing events at the university became a source of amusement for our satirical writer Edwin Phillips.
Another of our contacts at the university said to The Eye: “It has become obvious amongst all of us that anyone in CMU mentioning (The) Eye is immediately under suspicion for being one of your sources. They are afraid of the truth about the shambles … at CMU getting out into the mainstream media. Even UCU (University and College Union) colleagues are afraid to speak out which is indicative of the atmosphere here.”

Papers have shown that at one point CMU had set an ambitious target of reaching a level of 26,425 students, while staff claimed they were under-resourced for an enlargement on this scale, and students were admitted who simply could not cope with degree work.
But even with this enlargement, and supposed ‘improvement’, it seems that disclosing facts to some members of the media has not become better, despite CMU having previously employed a “Communications Professional” in Mr Cavani.
This means information must come from unofficial sources such as our whistleblower.
The Eye’s inquiries of the university about the growing ‘crisis’ under Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) legislation, were met with a blanket refusal to provide answers, as well as silence from Mr Cavani.
As with our questions to another controversial Welsh higher education institution, officials at CMU have stated that the queries to them from Phil were “vexatious”, although it was clear that all was not as it should be within CMU. We were given details of alleged “bullying”, and a different staff member got into trouble for “not eating a sandwich within the designated lunch hour” when officials from Human Resources were allegedly called in.
Some years ago, a number of staff analysed statistics given in a document and were deeply unimpressed. One told us: “In the VC news update there are some obvious discrepancies in some of the cherry-picked figures that any academic can spot”. It was claimed that there were major differences in anticipated turnover in the paper for 2018/19 to the statistic given in the Strategic Plan for CMU, saying: “So which figure is correct? The previously published strategic plan or the latest Pravda update?”.

A staff survey of Health and Wellbeing was carried out after we revealed it had been postponed, but the timing has been questioned by staff who claimed it was conducted following our disclosures. One told us: “(The) Eye must have hit a nerve as the VC tells us that ‘one priority is to address any concerns raised by staff in the Staff Health and Wellbeing Survey conducted last month’”.
The recent anonymous communication also raised the issue of the survey, saying ironically: “Funnily enough, nothing was said about the results of the Staff Survey that was conducted in the summer”.

Earlier, another of our sources had criticised the knowledge of some staff at CMU, saying: “A five year old has more technological intellect than some C Met staff… a lot of staff think storing to cloud has something to do with the weather!”.
Yet others, who have been at the university for some time, were praised by the contact: “There are some good staff being ‘trodden’ all over. I see it happening all the time. (As for) media non-exposure, I guess BBC Wales will worry about ‘links’ they have with CMet and don’t want bridges burnt”.

Even as the scandal at CMU has been kept from the mainstream media, The Eye have been inundated with desperate comments from distressed academics, and one said they are “demoralised and demotivated”.
A contact told us earlier: “Staffing levels are completely inadequate. Sickness levels and grievances are through the roof across the university.” Another of our sources within the Welsh university sector said:“They are rearranging the deckchairs on the Titanic”. A different unhappy academic has told us the university is in “turmoil” and in a state of “carnage”.

The university responded to one request for details under the FOIA completely denying that the VC (Ms Aitchison) as well as her deputy had been placed on ‘sick leave’ as the huge changes unfolded and the drive for more students came under fire from academics at CMU. We had also asked officials who were in charge at the university amid accusations from the academics, that it was a “rudderless ship”.
Normally responses to FOIA requests take several weeks, as in the case of the refusal on the grounds our questions were “vexatious”, but remarkably these denials came within hours, and CMU officials stressed that “Professor Cara Aitchison … is working normally”.

Does the SFC know about these things?!
The memories of Phil’s extraordinary 41 year award-winning career in journalism (when major events in Welsh academic circles were always covered) as he was gripped by the rare disabling condition Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia (HSP), have been released in the book ‘A GOOD STORY’. Order the book now!
Tomorrow – how during that career in journalism (when he was trained to use simple language, avoiding jargon), Phil (who spent 23 years with the BBC), would often be confronted by a manner of dress which went against the behaviour of the person, so crooks might be well turned out but people in dirty jeans could be straight as a die, and now, oddly, this is highlighted by a new film about a super-hero!