[http://www.hindu.com/mag/2007/06/17/stories/2007061750260100.htm]
Link to articleThe Supreme Court orders on ragging should not only curb
the practice but also generate awareness.AKHILA SIVADAS Photo: R.V.
Moorthy HEALTHY EQUATIONS: Motivate students to discover other ways of
welcoming new entrants.COME June and all of us get into the annual
ritual of celebrating exam results, checking out new courses, rating
universities, getting involved as a family and community in the “rites
of passage” from school to college and debating endles sly the many
ethical and material concerns that this process throws up. This year
would have been no different but for the slew of directives that the
apex court has issued to check ragging on campuses across the
country.On May 16, the Supreme Court declared that ragging and any form
of abetment to ragging, causing injury or subjecting anyone to forceful
confinement, physical and sexual assault, would now be treated as a
criminal offence. And as in the case of Section 498 A, dealing with
cruelty towards women, since the burden of proof would be on the
accused rather than the victims of ragging, the court has empowered
victims and their families to get the FIR registered.Issue and its
ramificationsThe question that needs to be asked is whether all the
stakeholders — students, parents and guardians, faculty and
administrators — understand the full implications of the law and are
ready to confront the issue with all its ramifications.Dr. Kavita
Sharma, Principal of a leading college in Delhi University, stated that
while they have been consistently addressing the ragging issue over the
last few years and even evolved a graded response to the problem — from
fining students to taking extreme steps of easing them out of the
hostel to even rusticating some — the challenge today is to go beyond
managing and arbitrating on the issue and get on with the business of
legally enforcing the ban on ragging. With the Supreme Court determined
to crack down on it, she was clear that “it is not the form of ragging”
but how the fresher perceives the ordeal that would determine the
issue.“We have been telling students that there is no distinction
between harmless or normal ragging where you get the juniors to sing
and dance versus ragging that takes on more a virulent form. At the end
of the day, even mild forms of ragging could prove to be hard on some
young people and could lead to a demand for legal redress,” she
added.Therefore, the major challenge before the academic community, she
emphasised, is not only to make sure that the “law acts as a deterrent
and prevents all excesses but also motivates the students to search for
alternatives, discover other ways of welcoming the new entrants, bring
freshers into the college mainstream and establish a more healthy
equation with them.”In fact, for a majority of students who are day
scholars, much of the ragging was “harmless interaction where juniors
get introduced to the seniors and the latter in turn discovered the
talents of the juniors,” said Samil Ahmed from Jamia Millia University,
New Delhi. Photo: K.R. Deepak Law as deterrent: Create an awareness
about the penalties.In some instances, students agree that the seniors
even “pulled their leg” and sent them scurrying to a classroom in the
opposite direction. But even while defending the practice of “healthy
ragging”, Nida (a first-year student from Jamia Millia) felt that there
is a thin line of distinction between such healthy ragging and the
not-so-healthy forms. For students the first few days are “days of
terror” and the court order will come as a relief to many. “At least
this year the freshers will feel relaxed and know what to do if faced
with an unbearable situation,” she added.Clearly, the crux of the
problem lies in the selective engagement with the issue. One such
convenient spin is that the court is not in any way questioning the
convention or tradition of ragging. What it is seeking to do is to
prevent the excesses and distortions that have over the years crept
into the body politic of the campus and is particularly vicious in the
professional colleges and more so in the many new-found campuses, where
money and muscle power have combined to create an altogether new
culture of acquiring knowledge.Undoubtedly, there has been some
clinching as well as disturbing evidence on how vicious the whole
problem has become. Those who have been through the most harrowing
experiences have not only spoken up but also decided to take on the
menace headlong and not rest till the heinous practice is appropriately
dealt with and weeded out altogether.Yet, anti-ragging advocates like
Shivam Vij, editor of the website stopragging, have consistently
maintained that there is nothing like “mild ragging” and that
criminalisation is inherent in the whole process and that what we are
witnessing today is nothing short of gross human rights violation.
People like him have no patience with those who take a “politically
correct” position on ragging and “despite all the horror stories…
lecture on how good ragging can be,” or about how one needs to
distinguish between the many ice-breakers that seniors use to draw the
freshers out of their shell and make them “bold and get exposed to the
world” and the exceptional instances when they “cross the limit and
inflict the worst kind of brutalities”.Many such independent groups
have collaborated with the Raghavan Committee, set up by the Ministry
of Human Resource Development, to find ways to curb the practice of
ragging in schools and colleges.Anguish and traumaIt does not take too
much to understand where this anguish and the “enough-is-enough”
position stem from. Sharing her experience, one parent observed that
three years ago, when she found her son traumatised by the ragging, she
decided to shift him to another college and get him to move on with his
life, she realised that she was fortunate in being able to “act
decisively and nip the issue in its bud.” At that point of time, when
she considered the possibility of seeking redress, she was discouraged
by the fear of reprisal.So while welcoming the court directives on the
grounds that it will definitely discourage ragging, she wonders
whether, if the option to register an FIR had been available to her
three years ago, she would have exercised it or not. One gets the
feeling that not everyone feels confident of seeking police
intervention. With most campuses anxious to maintain their autonomy and
prevent undue intrusion by the police, this may discourage victims of
ragging and their families to seek legal redress.Most stakeholders
agree that a strong legal response was inevitable and the recent
developments warranted it. Even while many constructive methods were
devised to check the practice, there is a feeling that these measures
only succeeded in driving the practice underground, or more precisely
behind closed doors. Many victims have reported how a façade of
self-regulation has been maintained to keep administrators happy and
reassure them that the situation was under control. In fact, one
fall-out has been hardening of such malpractices and the court, by
empowering the victim, is trying to nail this persistent offender and
perpetrator.So the unanimous opinion is that the pendulum has swung in
favour of the much-needed legal deterrents and the university
authorities are wasting no time in swinging into action. The University
Grants Commission has issued instructions to all universities to
implement the court orders in the strictest possible manner. The
Secretary of the UGC, T.R. Kenn, has been quoted in the media as
calling on all universities “to implement the directives of the Supreme
Court in letter and spirit.”Gearing upMeanwhile, the authorities across
colleges, universities and professional institutions such as IITs, are
gearing up to implement the court’s orders. According to Rajendra
Singh, Registrar, IIT, Delhi, they “are taking every possible step to
implement the court’s directives in toto.” This involves setting up a
common mechanism across the IITs to enforce the law and monitor the
situation, provide students with mobile numbers of all faculty members
associated with the anti-ragging panel and strengthen students’ access
to services such as helplines.Speaking about the measures taken by the
colleges affiliated to Delhi University, Dr. Kavita Sharma said that
“apart from incorporating the court’s orders in the prospectus and
ensuring that they are prominently displayed in different parts of the
colleges, we are also orienting the students on the issue and their
responsibilities and obligations and strengthening the self-regulation
processes that the college has developed over the years.”Clearly the
challenge is twofold: First to deal with the many horrific incidents of
the past; to collectively introspect, reflect and face the issue
squarely and address the bitterness and sense of estrangement that it
has generated among people who have experienced it at close quarters.
Second, to ensure that under the fear of the law the authorities do not
respond in a knee-jerk fashion and quite unintentionally contribute to
the miscarriage of justice.Some unsuspecting young people should not
get caught in the crossfire, used to either to settle scores or get
victimised by peremptory legal processes. Enough checks have to be
created to ensure that we make a new beginning and use the law to not
only curb the practice but to generate public awareness on the issue
and have an informed engagement with it.

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Posted By Ragging News to Ragging News from Indian Colleges -
www.noragging.com at 6/17/2007 09:26:00 AM

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