UGC amends anti-ragging regulations
The changes are incorporated in the Curbing the Menace of Ragging in Higher Educational Institutions (third amendment), Regulations, 2016, which have come into force.
Harassing a student from the north-east on
the basis of ethnicity or a Bihari student on the basis of regional background
can now lead to expulsion or rustication, among other punishments, in higher
educational institutions.
The University Grants Commission has amended
its anti-ragging regulations to include physical or mental abuse on grounds of
ethnicity, caste, religion, colour, regional background, linguistic identity,
nationality and sexual orientation. Earlier, ragging was defined as teasing and
physical or psychological harm of different kinds.
“There are plenty of complaints of such
harassment on campuses. They range from the use of a particular derogatory word
to address students from the north-east to the seemingly innocuous ‘Bihari’ or
‘Bhaiyya’ being disparagingly used for students from Bihar and Uttar Pradesh,”
an official of the UGC told The Hindu. “All these can now be seen as
coming under the ambit of ragging and can attract punishment.”
Publicity
The Human Resource Development released Rs.
5-crore to the UGC in the last financial year to publicise this, sources say.
The publicity material includes an FM Radio message on calling a student
“rustic” (ganwaar) to a film featuring cricketer Virat Kohli, said an official.
Posters and messages have also been dispatched to universities and colleges to spread
awareness.
Wider
meaning
Officials said the UPA government had set the
ball rolling after an Arunachal Pradesh student, Nido Tania, died of injuries
he suffered in an assault at a market in south Delhi.
The changes are incorporated in the Curbing
the Menace of Ragging in Higher Educational Institutions (third amendment),
Regulations, 2016, which have come into force.
Ragging now means not just physical or mental
hurt caused to a fresher. It covers “any other student” too, meaning a senior
student inflicting harm on another senior student is also ragging. The rules
kick in if the harm is caused anywhere on a campus or even in a campus
transport facility. The anti-ragging committee of the institution can debar
violators from classes, fellowships and examinations, withhold results and
order suspension from hostel, rusticate and even order expulsion from the
institution, depending on the severity of the offence.
Press Release Source | The Hindu | 3 August 2016
Amendment available at | http://www.ugc.ac.in/pdfnews/7823260_Anti-Ragging-3rd-Amendment.pdf
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Khaitan
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