[http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/nst/Monday/Columns/20070226084709/Article/index_html]
Link to article26 Feb 2007WHILE ragging is not officially approved in
the military, it is astonishing how its unofficial practice finds many
apologists in the military circles who defend it as a tradition worth
preserving.While conceding that the vicious beatings of a trainee air
force pilot in Alor Star seem to have been excessive, the argument
seems to be that so long as hazing is not extreme, it is
acceptable.Mild ragging is OK, it seems, because it is a rite of
initiation which instils the esprit de corps needed to face the enemy
in battle. But the problem is that what some may consider mild, others
may regard as extreme, and even the mildest of ragging can be
traumatic.In the matter of the the Royal Malaysian Air Force trainee,
ragging seems to be a euphemism for what appears to be a case of
collective torture.The problem is not the excesses but the very idea
that cadets have to be subjected to rites of passage that are cruel and
abusive to develop discipline and build character.The question then is
whether the drills and instructions during the training they receive in
boot camp are so inadequate that they have to be humiliated. The
violent attacks on the air force cadet strip bare the malice and
brutality in military culture. That it has been tacitly allowed is
alarming because it lays the groundwork for things to get out of
hand.The fact that it took police and media reports to take the lid off
the issue reveals the strength of the unwritten code of silence and the
lack of oversight mechanisms in the military.It raises questions about
the need for the military to condone the practice and should spur the
Defence Ministry to take measures to change the culture rather than
dismiss the abuses as isolated incidents and blaming them on the
aberrant act of a few.While steps have apparently been taken to combat
abuses in the past, their implementation seems to have been
lackadaisical. While a board of inquiry has been established to
prosecute the abusers, the pledge not to allow a repeat of the incident
hinges on measures to address ragging in the armed forces.The military
should adopt a zero-tolerance policy towards ragging by laying down the
ground rules and implementing them unequivocally and
consistently.Otherwise, the only way systematic abuses in the military
academies would be highlighted would be for someone to report to the
police and squeal to the Press.

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Posted By Ragging News to Ragging News from Indian Colleges -
www.noragging.com at 2/26/2007 09:42:00 AM

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