Inside a Decades-Old University Project with Concerns About Funding and a Growing Network – UBU Part 3

A proposed Harry Potter-inspired university project in Belize continues to generate controversy after more than a decade of development without physical progress or official approval. Ultimate Business University (UBU), conceptualized as a massive 20,000-acre educational complex, promises transformative opportunities for at-risk youth but remains an unregistered entity facing government skepticism.

The ambitious vision, promoted since at least 2010, describes a self-sustaining campus city featuring extensive farmland, manufacturing zones, and residential facilities. UBU claims it would become Belize’s largest employer with 35,000 positions, primarily filled by local citizens. The project’s core mission involves relocating vulnerable American youth to Belize for educational rehabilitation through trade and high school programs.

UBU founder Sharyn Abbott characterizes the initiative as a personal mission inspired by her late brother. “This program is to help give kids the life that they really deserve and the education that they should have,” Abbott stated in a February 2025 interview. She maintains that U.S. judges would emancipate minors as young as fifteen for enrollment in the Belize-based program.

However, Belize’s Ministry of Education, Science, and Technology issued an official warning in January 2025 clarifying that UBU holds no legal registration or authorization to operate as an educational institution. Education Minister Francis Fonseca reinforced this position, expressing skepticism about the project’s feasibility and characterizing it as potentially exploitative. “You don’t know who the people are; you don’t know anything about them,” Fonseca cautioned.

The project faces fundamental questions regarding its funding mechanism and timeline. Abbott attributes all delays to an unreleased personal investment made over a decade ago, denying any public fundraising efforts despite an active “Donate Now” PayPal link directing contributions to her personal account. She has declined requests for financial documentation or independent auditing, stating “no business currently exists to audit.”

Despite lacking legal status, UBU has recruited hundreds of professionals globally through platforms like LinkedIn, with many discovering their names listed as staff without explicit consent. Several Belizean recruits reported red flags including constantly shifting timelines, unrealistically high salary offers, and extravagant benefits packages featuring campus townhouses and resort getaways.

As of December 2025, Abbott’s latest newsletter anticipates funding release by January 2026, with plans to accommodate staff at Belizean hotels while property acquisition occurs. The ministry’s warning remains in effect as the project continues operating without official recognition or physical infrastructure after nearly two decades of promotion.