[http://www.catholic.org/international/international_story.php?id=24178]
Link to reportNEW DELHI, India (UCAN) – Church educators in India have
welcomed a Supreme Court ruling on hazing.The May 16 ruling came after
the country's apex court heard recommendations of a government
committee that studied hazing in Indian institutions of higher
learning. The court wants the Indian Penal Code amended to make hazing
punishable under the law.The court ruling "will benefit many students,"
especially freshmen who suffer from seniors' "ragging sessions," said
Father K.J. Antony, secretary of the education commission of the
Catholic Bishops' Conference of India. Hazing, commonly
called "ragging" in India, sometimes leads to tension and violence, the
Salesian priest told UCA News on May 21.Mani Jacob, who heads the
ecumenical All India Association for Christian Higher Education, noted
that the practice has caused deaths in several colleges and
hostels. "Ragging," he told UCA News, has "become a law-and-order
problem" that many Indian institutions have trouble tackling.Welcoming
the ruling "both as an educationist and as a parent," Jacob said that
even student political organizations resort to hazing to induct
freshmen into their associations.Jacob wants "a new kind of
socialization" to help freshmen interact with seniors. He wants school
administrations to organize sports and cultural programs to help
students in different classes mingle. Authorities should also publicize
the court ruling in their institutions, he added.Now hazing "could be
controlled," he remarked, adding that Christian institutions would "be
happy to follow" the Supreme Court directive.The court wants
a "comprehensive definition" for hazing to include abetment to hazing,
criminal conspiracy, causing injury, wrongful confinement, use of force
and assault. It also favors "exemplary (and) justifiably harsh"
punishment.The court also wants hazing cases tried on a fast-track
basis to avoid delays. For this, it called for an amendment to the
Criminal Procedure Code.The Coalition to Uproot Ragging from Education,
a volunteer organization, recorded 61 cases in colleges and three more
reported in Indian media during 2005-2006. Of the 51 colleges whose
students were involved, 19 are architecture colleges, 18 engineering
institutions, nine medical schools and five polytechnic colleges.The
court took a cue from the government committee's call for tough
measures to address the problem. It wants the onus of proving innocence
to be on the accused. The court also wants local police to register
official complaints from victims or from parents dissatisfied with
institutional action on hazing cases.The stipulation on the onus,
Father Antony says, will make seniors "more careful to avoid ragging
juniors." The priest also welcomed the court asking educational
institutions to file criminal cases against those responsible for
hazing, even if the victims or their relatives refuse to complain.There
is the possibility of juniors taking advantage of the court ruling,
Father Antony cautioned, referring to the possibility of false
accusations against seniors, who would then have to prove their
innocence. But the new law will benefit many, he added.

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Posted By Ragging News to Ragging News from Indian Colleges -
www.noragging.com at 5/23/2007 07:14:00 PM

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