[http://www.hindu.com/2007/05/18/stories/2007051802991100.htm]
Link to article V. JayanthThe R.K. Raghavan committee recommends a new
section on ragging in the IPC, the burden of proof on the accused, and
that education institutions help the victims file FIRs.Students of
Delhi University during a demonstration.THE SUPREME Court's directive
to governments and educational institutions to come down heavily on
ragging has set the stage for a fresh debate on how to curb the menace.
The Court's directives come in the wake of a detailed report submitted
by the R.K. Raghavan committee, which was asked to study the problem
and make recommendations to redress the situation. What are the salient
features of this committee's report and the focus of its
recommendations?"The committee recommends that rather than subjecting
each incident of ragging to a different penal treatment under various
sections of the Indian Penal Code, a new section should be added to the
IPC, making ragging a punishable offence on the analogy of Section
498A, dealing with cruelty towards women [related to dowry deaths]. We
have already explained that ragging is an offence with a multiplicity
of ingredients, each of which constitutes an offence punishable under
the existing provisions of the Indian Penal Code. We further recommend
that the Indian Evidence Act should also be suitably amended on the
analogy of Section 113A of that Act, to shift the burden of proof on
those accused of ragging."We recommend that a comprehensive definition
should be included by way of explanation in the proposed new section of
ragging in the IPC, and all the punishable ingredients namely, abetment
to ragging, public nuisance created during ragging, violation of
decency and morals through ragging, injury to body, causing hurt or
grievous hurt, wrongful restraint, wrongful confinement, use of
criminal force, assault as well as sexual offences or even unnatural
offences, extortion, criminal trespass, offences against property,
criminal intimidation and attempts to commit any or all of the above
mentioned offences against the victim should be incorporated thereto,
prescribing appropriate punishments in respect of one or a group of
offences."Another significant recommendation relates to speedy trial.
The committee wants the Criminal Procedure Code to be amended to ensure
that cases involving ragging are tried on a fast-track basis, keeping
in mind the academic priorities of students who may be required to
depose before the courts or assist the prosecution.The basis of the
committee's work, direction, and recommendations stem from the
following perceptions:Primary responsibility for curbing ragging rests
with academic institutions themselves;Incentives should be available to
institutions for curbing the menace; there should also be disincentives
for failure to do so;Enrolment in academic pursuits or a campus life
should not immunise any adult citizen from penal provisions of the laws
of the land;Ragging needs to be perceived as a failure to inculcate
human values from the schooling stage;Behavioural patterns among
students, particularly potential "raggers," need to be identified;
Measures against ragging must deter its recurrence;Concerted action is
required at the level of the school, higher education institution,
district administration, university, State and Central governments, to
make any curb effective;Media and civil society should be involved at
all stages.The other members of the committee were: S.G. Dhande, A.K.
Agarwal, S. Sathikh, Chandra Krishnamurthy, Rajendra Prasad, and Sunil
Kumar, Member-Convener.In a Special Leave Petition last year,
University of Kerala Vs Council of Principals of Colleges, the Supreme
Court directed that a committee headed by the former CBI Director, R.K.
Raghavan, be set up to suggest means to prevent ragging in educational
institutions. Its terms of reference were to study the various aspects
of ragging; suggest means and methods of prevention; suggest possible
action that could be taken against persons indulging in the practice;
and to suggest possible action that can be taken against college or
university authorities in the event of ragging.Multi-dimensional
problemThe committee made it clear the problem has several aspects —
psychological, social, political, economic, cultural, and academic. Of
late, sexual dimensions have also crept in. It said: "In none of the
interactions did we come across any instance of the educational
institutions approaching the police authorities in reporting even the
extreme cases of ragging. Usually, the complaints with the police are
lodged by the parentsof the victims. Most of the parents have reported
that the university/college support for following up on the case with
the law and order machinery has been lukewarm — indeed, in some cases,
the institutions have actively dissuaded persistent parents. The
committee is concerned with the evasive attitude of institutions and it
is therefore necessary that the institutional authorities are made
accountable in a variety of ways." It therefore wanted the educational
institutions to assist the victims to lodge an FIR with the police on
any incident of ragging.To illustrate how timely complaints can prove
effective, the committee cites the Kerala case in point — of a girl
student of the Kottayam Medical College. Her complaint against senior
men students resorting to sexual assault while ragging led to their
arrests and prosecution as well as action against the college
authorities.The committee notes: "Almost all the stake-holders have
failed to act in some way or the other in curbing the menace of ragging
in every State. The State Governments have not monitored if the ragging
in their State has been curbed or not. The authorities of the
institution have not played a pro-active role, which was very necessary
in terms of the guidelines of the apex court, where primary
responsibility was cast on the institutional authorities. On the
contrary, it was told to the committee that the authorities dissuaded
the victims of ragging from making any complaint."The committee's
recommendations relate to actions to be taken at the level of schools,
higher educational institutions, district administration, universities,
State and Central authorities. Not only that, it wants civil society
and the media to be involved at each level to tackle the problem of
ragging.At the school level, it calls for introduction of human rights
education and counselling for students. The School Leaving Certificate
should mention the character of the student in terms of behavioural
pattern.In college, there must be an annual undertaking to be signed by
students and parents, jointly, stating that they have read the relevant
instructions on ragging and punishment, and the ward, if found guilty,
will be proceeded against. The committee recommends a carrot and stick
policy towards educational institutions in relation to curbing ragging,
and this should extend to funding as well as grading.There should be
institutional level, district level, and State-level committees to
monitor ragging and curb it. At the national level, the University
Grants Commission must coordinate and monitor the anti-ragging
movement. The governments and the media should sensitise the people,
including students, and create awareness about the problem. A toll-free
helpline could be created for easy access to students in distress.

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Posted By Ragging News to Ragging News from Indian Colleges -
www.noragging.com at 5/18/2007 07:33:00 AM

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