May I present a counter-argument: if a university disconnects you from the academic community due to corruption, how likely is it that they would admit this fact in the country they operate in? The answer here is definitely zero. So the only option one has in this case is to raise the visibility of the difficulties at hand to the international (global) level. You have to fight for your rights: you should never give up!! I found a recent article on the topic I referred to above:
Elena Denisova-Schmidt 2023. How to tackle global academic corruption, 2023 University World News, 23 September 2023, May I quote: "In my recent edited collection, Corruption in Higher Education: Global challenges and responses, 34 authors – including educators, policy-makers and practitioners from all five continents – reported on various corruption issues in higher education using examples from multiple countries and regions. The main takeaways from the collection are as follows.:
"Academic corruption is not always visible...Academic corruption is ambivalent...The complexity of academic corruption makes it difficult to develop and implement remedies and other measures....." Free access: https://www.universityworldnews.com/post.php?story=20230919114938412