[http://www.telegraphindia.com/1070220/asp/calcutta/story_7415926.asp]
Link to reportDEEPANKAR GANGULYHelp is at hand for victims of ragging,
courtesy an NGO.The recently-formed state chapter of Coalition to
Uproot Ragging from Education (Cure) has planned counselling sessions
and treatment facilities to rehabilitate students affected by
ragging.On Wednesday, the NGO will hold an anti-ragging seminar at the
AC Hall of the Book Fair. Two ragging victims — Rabindranath Das of
Jadavpur University and Samir Swarnakar of Ayurvedic College — will
attend the programme.“We have also decided to publish an information
booklet on ragging at the Book Fair. This will be part of our awareness
campaign against ragging. The booklet will be distributed free,” said
convener of Cure’s state chapter Kushal Banerjee. He is an intern at
Sambhunath Pandit Hospital.Cure was formed in Delhi in July 2001. Its
West Bengal chapter was born in March 2006. The NGO has nearly 70
members, most of them students.The Raghavan committee — set up by the
Union human resource development ministry, on orders from the Supreme
Court, to suggest ways to prevent ragging — accepted a report prepared
by the NGO’s state chapter last year. National coordinator of Cure
Harsh Agarwal submitted the report to the panel in New Delhi.“Members
of the Raghavan committee visited the Salt Lake campus of Jadavpur
University earlier this month,” stated Banerjee. He defined ragging as
traditional and systematic rights abuse, practised by seniors upon
freshers in educational institutions.“In Calcutta, ragging has, of
late, entered schools. We have received complaints from parents of
Class VI and Class IX students,” added Banerjee.

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Posted By Ragging News to Ragging News from Indian Colleges -
www.noragging.com at 2/20/2007 09:45:00 AM

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