- Taken for granted - 21st April 2025
- In through the out door - 15th April 2025
- Baby talk - 14th April 2025

An executive at a headline-grabbing Welsh university where workers say they are âtoo frightened to talkâ, believes there has been a warning not to return to work until the case against senior management alleging bullying has been settled, The Eye can reveal.
The executive has been told there is a bar on returning to the role at controversial Cardiff Metropolitan University (CMU) until the grievance case against contentious Vice-Chancellor (VC) Cara Aitchison is cleared. But the senior deceision-maker believes officials are determined to stop a return to work.

One insider has told us it is believed that a troika of highly-paid managers now runs CMU in the absence of Professor Aitchison, and has provided names.
In the high-profile grievance case brought against Professor Aitchison, who we have exclusively disclosed is now off sick, a bullying culture at CMU has been alleged, and lawyers are involved.

The latest extraordinary details are set against a disturbing backdrop after we have been contacted by numerous academics at CMU who say they cannot speak out publicly about what they claim is ‘chaos’, and that leading officials who have oversight of the institution are âturning a blind eye even though a grievance case has gone straight to themâ. The Eye have received alarming complaints that the new people who have been brought in are of low calibre, and subservient to Professor Aitchison.

After a recent meeting of the Vice-Chancellor’s Executive Group (VCEG), unhappy staff have been 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 one of our âwhistleblowersâ at CMU says it is just further evidence of âmore controlling and lack of trustâ.
The source adds that it has become madness at the institution once more, saying:  âItâs starting to go mad againâ. The contact told The Eye earlier:  âI canât wait for the REF (Research Excellence Framework) results ⌠Research across the university is at an all time lowâ.

A spoof Twitter site has been created, which is widely followed by staff at CMU. Our journalists have shown previously how another source at CMU told us the atmosphere was âfeverishâ, while more than two and a half times the amount of money was spent on legal fees compared with the year before, and the astonishing events at the university have become a source of amusement for our satirical writer Edwin Phillips.

It has been alleged by a number of staff who left and contacted us, that they have been required to sign âgaggingâ orders. One angry former staff member at CMU has given us the names of others who have sought their own legal advice, but in his words they âhave been shown the doorâ. We also understand there have been attempts made to settle the official grievances.
But The Eye have also received a huge number of critical comments from academics that the mainstream media in Wales continue to ignore the mounting crisis at CMU, as officials have undertaken the enormous alterations needed to accommodate thousands of extra students.

One of our contacts at the university said to The Eye:  âIt 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.â

Documents show that CMU has set an ambitious target of reaching a level of 26,425 students by 2023, an increase of 8,810 on last yearâs figure of 17,615, while staff claim they are under-resourced for an enlargement on this scale and students are being admitted who simply cannot cope with degree work. Yet it seems the massive changes at the university have done little to improve its performance. It is now ranked 108 in The Times and The Sunday Times Good University Guide 2019 â which means it has plunged 18 places in only a year. One of our sources at CMU said it had ânose divedâ.

But our own inquiries of the university about the growing crisis under Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) legislation have been met with a blanket refusal to provide answers. As with our questions to another contentious Welsh university, officials at CMU have stated that the queries to them from our Editor Phil Parry were âvexatiousâ.
It is clear though that all is not as it should be within CMU. We have been given details of alleged âbullyingâ, and a different staff member got into trouble for ânot eating a sandwich within the designated lunch hourâ, amid allegations that officials from Human Resources were called in. The event became notorious within the university as the âsandwich sagaâ.

It has all come as another internal document to staff at CMU, and passed to us, has been condemned by one of our whistlebowers as âthe latest attempt by our Vice Chancellor to persuade us all that everything is going well and according to plan, but it certainly doesnât feel that wayâ.
A number of Professor Aitchisonâs staff have analysed the statistics given in the document and are deeply unimpressed. One told us:  âIn the VC news update there are some obvious discrepancies in some of the cherry-picked figures that any academic can spotâ. The source claims there are major differences in anticipated turnover in the paper for 2018/19 to the statistic given in the Strategic Plan for CMU, and continues: âSo which figure is correct? The previously published strategic plan or the latest Pravda update?â.

A staff survey of Health and Wellbeing has now been carried out after we revealed it had been postponed, but the timing has been questioned by staff who claim it was conducted following our disclosures. One told us:  â(The) Eye must have hit a nerve as the VC tells us that âone priority is to address any concerns raised by staff in the Staff Health and Wellbeing Survey conducted last monthââ.
Another of our sources criticised the knowledge of some staff then at CMU, saying:  âA 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!â. Yet others who have been at the university for some time are praised by the contact: âThere are some good staff being âtroddenâ all over.  I see it happening all the time.  (As for) media non-exposure, I guess BBC Wales will worry about âlinksâ they have with CMet and donât want bridges burntâ.

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 the latest says they are âdemoralised and demotivatedâ. One contact told us earlier:  âStaffing levels are completely inadequate. Sickness levels and grievances are through the roof across the university.â

Another of our sources within the Welsh university sector said:âThey are rearranging the deckchairs on the Titanicâ. A different unhappy academic has told us the university is in âturmoilâ and in a state of âcarnageâ.
Earlier examples of alleged âsick leaveâ were completely denied by CMU.
The university responded to our request for details under the FOIA flatly denying information from one of our contacts that Professor Aitchison and her deputy were off sick as the huge changes unfolded and the drive for more students came under fire from academics at CMU. We had also asked officials who was in charge at the university amid accusations from the academics, that it was a ârudderless shipâ. Normally responses to FOIA requests take several weeks, as in the case of the refusal on the grounds our questions were âvexatiousâ, but remarkably these denials came within hours, and CMU officials stressed that âProfessor Cara Aitchison ⌠is working normallyâ.
But The Eye have exclusively revealed how the entire university sector in Wales has been rocked by a succession of scandals.

We have been alone in reporting how a remarkable internal dirty tricks campaign is underway at controversial Swansea University, where the VC has been suspended, a top-level investigation was launched into a questionable multi-million pound land deal where the police had to be called in, and officials had employed a crook. The contentious VC of Bangor University hit the headlines after it emerged he lived in an expensive grace-and-favour house, and our journalists reported how he had referred to Chinese women in disparaging racial and sexist terms.
We showed how Aberystwyth University, which opened a campus on the holiday island of Mauritius, had plunged down the rankings, but the sensational VC at the time said they should be taken “with a pinch of salt”. The Eye were the first to report that Cardiff University had come under fierce attack after embarking on another round of job cuts.

The questions about what now is happening at CMU were also sent to a senior official there who is one of Professor Aitchisonâs acolytes marked âurgentâ but there has been no reply.
At least the executive who has taken out a grievance case against CMU has received a reply.
Don’t come back…
Our Editor Phil Parryâs memories of his extraordinary 35-year award-winning career in journalism as he was gripped by the incurable disabling condition Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia (HSP), has been released in a major new book âA GOOD STORYâ. Order the book now!Â

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