See:
http://themenaceofragging.blogspot.com/

*Ragging at JNU: Close your eyes and say there is no evil

*Recently, several newspapers reported how JNU which has been ‘ragging-free’
for forty years registered the first complaints of ragging in August this
year. Calling JNU ragging-free for forty years is like closing your eyes and
saying there is no evil.

No, I do not have any evidence to say that ragging existed in JNU before
this incident occurred. However, at CURE, we have received ragging
complaints from many students who study at so-called ragging-free campuses.
Why do these college do not know about this?

Firstly, even if they knew they would do their utmost to hide this and
protect the image of their college. Secondly, why should they look for
something they do not want to find in the first place! If they find it out,
then they will have to make efforts to solve it and hide it. Ragging is a
severely complicated issue and its readdressal has led to violence and
unrest in campuses, like the recent hunger strike at JNU. Why to try to
detect something which will cause you undue trouble?

Thirdly, colleges lay the onus of reporting ragging incidents on freshers.
We, at CURE, have several times stressed, that the fresher cannot be
expected to report ragging incidents. He/she is under tremendous fear and
pressure not to report ragging incidents and get himself/herself in a worse
situation. Most cases show that when ragging incidents are reported, not
only the senior batch ostracizes the fresher, in many cases, the campus also
tries to hush the case and further victimize the victim.

Thus my question to JNU is whether they were proactively monitoring to
detect any ragging incidents at campus? Were they doing surprise rounds in
hostels at odd hours in a bid to detect ragging? I guess not. They were
probably expecting that the fresher would come and complaint that he had
suffered ragging. This is what I call close your eyes and say there is no
evil. I reiterate: the onus of reporting ragging incidents cannot be on the
victim.

I have nothing against JNU or their administration. My objection is to the
reactive attitude of campuses, which should rather be proactive. Only then
would they actually detect and clean ragging. On the contrary, I am
impressed with the JNU administration in the way they took strong measures
against the perpetrators of ragging, when the first fresher mustered the
courage to complain in the last 40 years. I hope this shall set a strong
detterent against ragging in future batches.

JNU’s case remains exemplary in depicting the complexity of ragging. As I
already mentioned, it depicts that our classification of ragging-free
campuses is wrong. Without proactive monitoring in place, there is nothing
which confirms that the campus is ragging-free. On the contrary, there are
umpteen reasons to believe that a campus claimed to be ragging-free is not
so. So stop calling campuses ragging-free till there is a proactive manner
to detect ragging implemented in them.

Secondly, what is very interesting is how the drama unfolded after the
expulsions were made. The senior students started a hunger strike,
Gandhian-means for probably the most anti-Gandhi-ends. This shows how any
action on ragging leads to arm-twisting from student-mobs and undue
disciplinary problems in campuses. Also, what is not surprising is how
junior students denied that they were ragged and one of them joined the
hunger strike. This brings to light the other problem with action against
ragging: Sympathy for the punished students. I do not see any reason for
sympathy for the guilty; they require punishment and reform, not sympathy.
And of course we know that the freshers who are claiming the seniors to be
innocent, were indeed ragged.

Frankly, I am for punishment against ragging, but against the particular
punishment meted out by JNU, i.e., rustication of the students for two years
from the campus. I believe that for an offender which may show recovery, the
punishment should make sure that he/she has a chance to recover and return
to the mainstream. In case this does not happen, we encourage formation of
an outcast group of losers on the sidelines of a vibrant society. A
six-month or one year suspension would have done the job and helped these
guys both taste punishment and eventually return to normal life.

My advise to campuses: Open your eyes, See the evil and Remove the evil!


-- 
Varun Aggarwal

EECS PhD Student, MIT, http://try2doit.com
(http://web.mit.edu/~varun_ag/www/)
MIT India Reading Group, http://india.mit.edu
CURE, India, http://www.noragging.com


--The delay in replying is not my indifference, but my incompetence --

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