[http://epaper.hindustantimes.com]
This was published on the 7th page of The Hindustan Times, Delhi
Edition (Apr 6, 2007)The online version can be accessed through
HT-EpaperTHREE YOUNG Indians, one of them a ragging victim, are waging
a unique war against ragging in institutions of education on the Net.
The voluntary group - Coalition to Uproot Ragging from Education or
CURE - started by the trio carried out an online research on instances
of ragging reported in leading Indian dailies and have analysed the
kind of torture youngsters are made to undergo.The research was carried
out on the basis of data pertaining to the period between January 2005
and December 2006. Within this period 64 cases of ragging reported by
leading newspapers and news channels were identified. Of these 61 were
reported from colleges and three from schools. The kind of ragging the
students were subjected could be ascertained only in 41 cases.Of these
41 cases, 8 were subjected to sexual ragging, while another 5 were
subjected to both physical and sexual ragging. Another 25 were
subjected to physical ragging, while only 2 underwent verbal
ragging. "But remember that in the case of 21, the cause could not be
ascertained. We found that 11 deaths took place due to ragging, another
10 attempted suicide, while 23 were injured," said Harsh Aggarwal, one
of the members of the group.According to the findings of the group, 12
suffered an adverse effect on their mental health while 5 left the
college following ragging. Of the 51 colleges identified where the
cases of ragging were reported, 18 were from engineering institutions,
9 from medical colleges and 5 from polytechnics and 19 from
architecture colleges.Aggarwal himself was ragged brutally by his
seniors at an Allahabad medical college in 2000. He was forced to leave
medical school and wage a twoyear legal battle to bring the guilty to
book. "Nothing could be done though because of the there are no
designated bodies that handle cases of ragging. I started looking for
other avenues of seeking redressal for ragging victims, when I chanced
up on the Yahoo! Group started by IIT (Bombay) student Mohit Garg and
NSIT scholar Varun Aggarwal," said Aggarwal.CURE started as a Yahoo!
group The No Ragging Group. "Varun and I were in engineering college
and concerned about the ragging happening around us and the total lack
of concern of people about it. It was merely seen as rites of growing
up. We decided to research the topic as offering individual help was
beyond our capability We used to get messages from places like Bihar
from students seeking help as they were being ragged," said
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Posted By Ragging News to Ragging News from Indian Colleges -
www.noragging.com at 4/07/2007 03:32:00 PM

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