[http://educationworldonline.net/index.php/page-article-choice-more-id-1265]
Link to articleEven as a new academic year has begun and bright-eyed
students are streaming into college campuses across the country, the
R.K. Raghavan Committee, appointed in December 2006 by the Union HRD
ministry, (following a Supreme Court directive) to suggest and monitor
measures to eliminate intimidation, molestation, assaults etc aka
‘ragging’ in college campuses, has severely criticised college
managements for lack of seriousness in curbing the ragging menace. At
the third review meeting of the committee held on June 11, Raghavan, a
former CBI director, made his displeasure clear with the “post-office
like attitude” of higher education regulatory organisations such as
UGC, AICTE and Medical Council of India.“These regulatory bodies have
become too close to educational organisations and believe in tokenism.
But I have told them in no uncertain terms to punish institutional
manage-ments not following our anti-ragging guidelines endorsed by the
Supreme Court on May 16, 2007,” he says. Raghavan’s annoyance with apex
level regulatory organisations is shared by the Coalition to Uproot
Ragging from Education (CURE), which together with Society Against
Violence in Education (SAVE), was instrumental in helping the Raghavan
committee formulate its anti-ragging code circulated to colleges and
universities before the beginning of the academic session last
year.It’s routine for UGC and other regulatory bodies to issue stern
instructions to college managements at the start of every academic
session. But thus far no college has been penalised for ignoring these
instructions. Due to inaction of past decades, these warnings are
seldom taken seriously by college authorities and senior students, and
ragging continues unabated. Last year despite the strong anti-ragging
recommendations made by the Raghavan Committee and endorsed by the
Supreme Court, more than 70 cases of ragging were reported in a span of
five months in the English media. The number of unreported cases and
those reported in the vernacular media are many times more,” says Harsh
Agarwal, who co-founded CURE along with Rajiv Ram in 2001.In the June
11 meeting attended by representatives of UGC, AICTE, Medical Council
of India, Dental Council of India, Nursing Council of India, UGC
informed the committee that a separate cell has been constituted within
the commission to investigate ragging-related complaints from colleges
and universities. Moreover a visiting committee has been constituted by
UGC to sensitise institutions about the scourge of ragging. The
visiting committee will have powers to recommend dilution of grants
under various UGC schemes for colleges and universities not complying
with the anti-ragging measures stipulated by the Raghavan Committee.“We
will publicise the measures against ragging in our campus as per the
committee directives and are ready to implement them,” says Dr. A.K.
Agarwal, dean Maulana Azad Medical College, New Delhi.According to
Harsh Agarwal of CURE the HRD ministry and regulatory bodies must list
the measures they have taken in the past year to enforce the
recommendations of the Raghavan Committee. “They must detail cases
where they have punished raggers. Even to this day, ragging victims
have no idea about the complaint registering authority. Last year CURE
sent a proposal to the HRD ministry to launch an anti-ragging campaign
but didn’t receive any response. Ditto when we proposed to declare
October 11 as ‘No Ragging Day’. It is really unfortunate that despite
our offer to help them on this issue, regulatory bodies are not willing
to involve us. CURE will be closely monitoring the progress and hopes
that this year the HRD ministry and other regulatory bodies will be
serious about strictly punishing institutions that tolerate this
humiliating ritual,” says Agarwal.CURE is all set to mount a nationwide
awareness campaign against ragging and is hopeful the HRD ministry will
support it. Meanwhile freshers subjected to harassment are advised to
contact CURE or SAVE for support. “Ragging is a criminal offence
punishable under the Indian Penal Code, 1860. And under the Raghavan
Committee’s guidelines it is incumbent on institutions to file FIRs
related to ragging incidents and support the victim. So, don’t fear
when you step into college life,” advises Agarwal.Autar Nehru (Delhi)

--
Posted By Ragging News to Ragging News from Indian Colleges -
www.noragging.com at 7/11/2008 10:05:00 AM

Reply via email to