[http://in.news.yahoo.com/080103/32/6p73u.html]
Link to reportBy HTFriday January 4, 12:53 AMRAGGING AT Delhi
government-run juvenile homes is not something new, but for the first
time 12 children were shifted out of a home in North Delhi's Alipur
after the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR)
intervened. They were given shelter in a home run by an NGO.The
organisation, Bachpan Bachao Andolan (BBA) rescued the children, who
were employed as bonded labourers in zari units located in Khanpur area
of South Delhi. The sub-divisional magistrate Mehraulli Sanjay Bagaria
had sent them to the Alipur juvenile home until the process for their
repatriation was completed. That was the beginning of another trauma
for these boys."The senior boys in the home used to beat them up often.
They were not given proper clothing and were not allowed to sleep in
cots. On Saturdays, seniors used to force them to stand for hours as
part of the induction programme into the home," said Sandhya Bajaj,
member of NCPCR.Bajaj had visited the home after some of the children
complained of inhuman behaviour in the homes. "I found there that such
ragging was a routine affair. Every boy who goes there has to undergo
this sort of ragging. What I found strange was that the authorities had
turned a blind eye towards such incidents," Bajaj recalled. It was then
that she asked sub-divisional magistrate Bagaria to shift them to
another home. Her plea was accepted.The case of the 12 boys is not a
case in isolation. Raj Mangal Prasad of NGO Pratidhi said most of the
Delhi government's juvenile homes are virtually run by senior boys aged
between 16years and 18 years, due to a huge shortage of staff in the
homes. "When they are the bosses, ragging is natural and part of the
culture to maintain disciplines in the homes," he said.

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Posted By Ragging News to Ragging News from Indian Colleges -
www.noragging.com at 1/04/2008 10:58:00 PM

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