[http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Cities/DU_targets_ragging_with_CCTVs_patrol/articleshow/3234099.cms#write]
Link to reportNEW DELHI: If Delhi University has its way, ragging may
soon become extinct.Colleges are going all out to stop it — setting up
anti-ragging committees, giving out special numbers to students to
lodge complaints, distributing booklets on the evils of ragging and
sensitising students through the use of posters and lectures. And if
that's not enough, the university has also, in association with the
Delhi Police, ensured there's mobile patrolling, more pickets and two
joint control rooms to monitor the campuses in the first few days of
the new academic session.Ragging is certainly the target in colleges
like LSR and Ramjas, where authorities are planning to distribute
booklets on the evils of ragging. This is besides the usual committees
that will be set up to monitor student activity from Wednesday onwards,
when college re-opens. Of course, if the committees don't seem enough,
there's always the CCTVs that some college have put up. Hans Raj has,
for the first time, set up four CCTV cameras to ensure that discipline
is maintained, while Kirori Mal had already installed cameras last
admission season. Said Hans Raj principal, S R Arora, "The measures are
only in place to ensure no untoward incidents take place."Off campus
colleges too seem serious about anti-ragging measures. Said Deen Dayal
Upadhyaya College principal, S K Garg, "There has been no ragging in
our college for almost eight years now. As the students don't get
ragged by their seniors, they do not rag their juniors either." Other
colleges are preferring to increase awareness than put up strict
arrangements.Sunil Sondhi, principal, Maharaja Agrasen College,
said, "We just make our students understand right on the first day that
every person has a dignity that needs to be respected, not only in the
first few days but through the three years that they spend in the
college."The university has also introduced many measures to ensure no
ragging incident takes place. The steps, which have been made mandatory
for all colleges, include restricted entry to both hostels and
colleges, as well as setting up of a formal redressal system where
students complaints are to be dealt with immediately. Hostels are to be
kept under strict vigil, with the university asking colleges to ensure
that regular and sudden inspections are made.Colleges have been asked
not to allow guests to stay in the hostel in the initial few weeks of
reopening of the colleges.Sealed complaint boxes will also be put up in
colleges so that students can file complaints without revealing their
identity.

--
Posted By Ragging News to Ragging News From Indian Colleges at
7/15/2008 02:24:00 PM

Reply via email to