[http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Opinion/Editorial/VIEW_Only_way_to_protect_vulnerable_students/articleshow/2060487.cms]
Link to article19 May, 2007 l 0027 hrs ISTWhen fun and games cross the
threshold of decency - when friendly persuasion turns to violent force
- ragging causes freshers extreme humiliation and suffering, both
mental and physical. Traumatised and scarred, some victims of ragging
have ended their lives. Others simply walk away to seek alternative
course options in other, safer, universities even if it means giving up
a hard-earned seat in a prestigious institution. That ragging helps
freshers familiarise themselves with their seniors is a specious
argument.Far from making newcomers feel comfortable, ragging simply
emboldens seniors to indulge in heightened forms of sadism. The Supreme
Court's warning on ragging to senior students and institutions and its
recommendation to mete harsh and exemplary punishment to detractors has
come not a day too soon. In a climate of fear where both
student-victims and heads of institutions hesitate to take action
against offenders - anticipating political backlash - the apex court
has come forward to rein in this obnoxious practice.The tradition of
ragging could be traced to the army, where relationships are grounded
in hierarchy and so seniors must be obeyed, at all cost. An institution
of learning, on the other hand, is supposed to be founded on openness.
There is no place here for the kind of coercion characteristic of
ragging. Worse, ragging by seniors is now only a euphemism for abuse
based on caste, race, ethnicity, religion, class and political
leanings. Ragging today is an expression of all kinds of prejudice.The
SC's recommendation that the institution of learning - where offensive
ragging has taken place - must file an FIR in the event of a complaint,
is an important step in recognising the problem and opening a way to
resolve it.Accountability of the perpetrator and the institution to
maintain discipline and order can only be possible if reporting and
filing of complaints is made mandatory. Expulsion of student offenders
and economic sanctions against institutions that refuse to take action
- as per the SC's injunctions - should go a long way in curbing the
heinous practice of indecent ragging.

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Posted By Ragging News to Ragging News from Indian Colleges -
www.noragging.com at 5/19/2007 08:34:00 AM

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