[http://www.newkerala.com/one.php?action=fullnews&id=5039]
Link to reportKochi, Dec 18: Dismissing the bail plea of five students
in a ragging case, the Kerala High Court today said the state
government should take effective steps to eliminate the ''pernicious
practice from our campuses.''Dismissing the bail application of Berin T
Varghese and four other students of the Government Veterinary College,
Mannuthi, accused in the attempted abetment of suicide by a junior
student, Justice R Basant observed, ''the bane of ragging has been
polluting the atmosphere in the professional college campuses of this
country for a long period of time. The young students cannot be
permitted to indulge in such vice.'' ''I have no doubt that prevention
of ragging must now be held too serious a business to be left to the
managements and principals of the colleges alone. Civil society has to
intervene effectively to prevent such incidents in our campuses.'' The
court also opined that strong legislative action supported by effective
executive enforcement and judicial interpretation could certainly help
the polity to prevent this vice.The state had to undertake a minimum
five-year ''war'' on ragging, not isolated skirmishes or battles to
exterminate and eliminate this vice from the college campuses, the
judge added.Principals and managements must be compelled by law to
cooperate with the law enthusiastically under threat of effective
sanction, he said.The history of war against ragging in the campus
revealed that there had been no determined and positive action. The
offence under the Kerala Prevention of Ragging Act was non-cognisable
and bailable. The system could not expect the impossible from the
police force. ''If you expect them to fight against ragging on behalf
of the sublime polity of this country, they have to be equipped with
necessary legal weapons,'' he added.--- UNI

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Posted By Ragging News to Ragging News from Indian Colleges -
www.noragging.com at 12/19/2007 11:33:00 PM

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