[http://www.dailyexcelsior.com/web1/07may07/edit.htm#5]
Link to articleBy AartiIt has a large higher education sector — the
third largest in the world in student numbers, after China and the
United States. Barring a few exceptions, many of our colleges and
universities have grown into massive, under-funded and ungovernable
institutions. On one hand at many of them, politics has intruded into
campus life, influencing academic appointments and decisions across
levels. The cause for concern is that campus violence in the country is
assuming dangerous proportions. At times it makes one ponder if our
colleges and universities are turning out to be the best refuge of
criminal elements?Some recent incidents of violence on our campuses
portrayed below are not only disturbing but clearly depict symptoms of
a deeper malaise.This 27 April, students protesting the killing of a
final year petroleum engineering student went on a rampage at the
Aligarh Muslim University. Paramilitary forces had to be deployed on
the campus to bring about normalcy.An undergraduate engineering student
in Hyderabad was injured on 22 April this year, when one of his seniors
allegedly fired on him inside the college premises. According to
eyewitnesses, as students were collecting hall tickets for the
examinations, the senior suddenly brandished his revolver and fired six
to seven rounds. This shows how the gun culture has permeated into
student life.A minor altercation between some students of Arts and
Social Science faculties during a cultural programme on the Banaras
Hindu University (BHU) campus last December, culminated in ransacking
of public property and destruction of motor vehicles.Violence on the
Bengal Engineering and Science University campus in Kolkata last August
claimed the life of a third-year student. What began as a minor
misunderstanding amongst two rival students' union led to the deceased
falling off the second floor of the hostel.Denial of readmission to
some students at the Jamia Milia Islamia whom the varsity officials had
identified as 'known trouble makers' and rusticated by the previous
Vice-Chancellor ended with several students unleashing violence
destroying property and vehicles last June.Last February, Cochin
University of Science and Technology, Kochi witnessed violent clashes.
A combination of factors including differences among employee and
student organisations besides brutality unleashed by groups from
outside the campus had shattered the peaceful atmosphere.The menace of
ragging is another important issue that seems to end in violence on the
campuses. It is believed that as early as 7th century A.D, in Greece,
new entrants to the sport community were subjected to all kinds of
humiliations and teasing to inculcate a team spirit in them. With
several modifications, such teasing became nasty with the first ragging
related death reported in 1873 when a freshman from Cornell University
fell into a gorge as a consequence of ragging.Even though the forms of
ragging may vary, generally it tends to create an environment of
persistent fear. It is not uncommon for a fresher to be forced into
performing petty work for seniors, like doing their academic
assignments, cleaning their rooms, fetching them food or attend to some
daily necessities. Ragging, instead of serving as an interactive
session between the seniors' and the juniors', at times, reaches
monstrous proportions.According to a recent report "Ragging in India",
compiled by Coalition to Uproot Ragging from Education (CURE), ragging
is not 'harmless fun' as perceived by many people. That close to 25
cases of suicide have been reported due to ragging in the last seven
years depicts the gravity of the situation. Severe ragging is
widespread in colleges where students stay in hostels, more so in
professional institutions like engineering and medical colleges where
on account of ragging; a fresher is totally at the mercy of seniors
with no support from family and friends.A Supreme Court judgment in
2001 banning ragging defined it as any disorderly conduct whether by
words spoken or written or by an act which the effect of teasing,
treating or handling with rudeness any other student. This includes
indulging in rowdy or in-disciplined activities which causes or is
likely to cause annoyance, hardship or psychological harm or to raise
fear or apprehension thereof in a fresher or a junior student or asking
the students to do any act or perform something which such student will
not do in the ordinary course and which has the effect of causing or
generating a sense of shame or embarrassment so as to adversely affect
the physique or psyche of a fresher or a junior student.Following the
ban, it is possible that many educational institutions across the
country may play down incidents of ragging to save themselves from
embarrassment besides prevent the institution's reputation from getting
tarnished.Another CURE study has revealed that between January 2005 and
December 2006, as many as 64 cases of ragging were reported by leading
newspapers and news channels. 61 reported cases were from colleges and
three from schools. Of the 51 colleges identified where ragging took
place, 18 were engineering institutions, 9 medical colleges, 5
polytechnics and 19 from architecture colleges. Notably, the kind of
ragging that students were subjected to was ascertained only in 41
cases. If 11 deaths took place due to ragging, another 10 attempted
suicide and 23 were injured.A recent survey by Lucknow University's
Social Work department concluded that over 80 per cent students were
ragged in hostels and 70 per cent found the varsity unsafe due to
ragging and abusive behaviour of the seniors. Around 93 per cent
students felt that during initial period of an academic session, when
ragging is normally reported, special guidelines for striking a rapport
between the seniors and the juniors would be of help.Under directions
from the Supreme Court, the anti-Ragging Committee constituted by the
Union Ministry of Human Resource Development headed by former CBI
director RK Raghavan is to submit its report to the apex court this 15
May.The HRD Ministry has also suggested that different universities,
colleges and educational institutions form anti-ragging committees
comprising of representatives from the student community, guardians,
parents and teachers.It needs to be realised that recurring incidents
of violence on centres of learning not only affects the academic
calendar but can create avoidable fear psychosis amongst students. This
can also have long term repercussions. Steps in the right earnest to
uproot violence in college campuses merit consideration.

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Posted By Ragging News to Ragging News from Indian Colleges -
www.noragging.com at 5/19/2007 02:35:00 PM

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