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THE GROWING CRISIS OF RAGGING IN KERALA

The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

|

March 18, 2025

AGGING in Kerala's educational institutions has become an organised crime, which at times is facilitated by drug abuse. Despite the strict laws to counter such brutalities, many educational institutions choose not to report such incidents.

- RAMESH CHENNITHALA

AGGING in Kerala's educational institutions has become an organised crime, which at times is facilitated by drug abuse. Despite the strict laws to counter such brutalities, many educational institutions choose not to report such incidents. Often, perpetrators receive political protection, enabling them to continue their violent activities on campus with impunity.

A recent example of this horrifying situation was the tragic death of J S Siddharth, a student at a Pookode veterinary college. For days, he was brutally assaulted by a group of senior students in the courtyard of the boys' hostel. The attackers stripped him and subjected him to unimaginable cruelty. Not one of those 100-odd students who witnessed this assault dared to intervene or report it. Eventually, Siddharth took his own life.

This cannot be considered a suicide—it's murder. The ones who physically tortured him are not the only culprits. Those who stood silently, paralysed by fear, are to be equally blamed. The core of this fear stems from the political patronage enjoyed by the perpetrators and their links to crime syndicates. Students fear if they speak up, they too will be subjected to similar brutality.

It's shocking that the leaders of the Students' Federation of India, the student wing of the CPI(M), led this inhumane torture. Following the incident, it was disturbing to witness the party, the state government and the college administration competing to shield these criminals.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

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A STITCH IN TIME CAN SAVE YOUR BABY'S HEART & LIFE

WHEN four-day-old Gourav refused to be breastfed, sweated heavily while suckling and faced severe breathing trouble, his parents feared something was terribly wrong. Worried, they rushed him to a district government hospital where an initial clinical examination detected cardiac issues with low oxygen saturation. As the hospital had no facility to diagnose the condition, his parents immediately shifted him to a private hospital in Bhubaneswar where an echocardiogram confirmed a large a hole in the wall separating the heart's two lower chambers (ventricular septal defect (VSD)) with obstruction in pulmonary artery. Doctors said the child was born with the hole in his heart. The diagnosis shocked the young couple as they recalled nothing unusual had come up during pregnancy.

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The New Indian Express Kalaburagi

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... Priyanka asks why no discussion on crucial issues

MOUNTING a counteroffensive to Prime Minister Modi's 'drama' jibe, the Congress on Monday said that the PM has once again delivered his \"dramabazi delivery' instead of addressing the key issues before Parliament on the first day of the winter session. Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra attacked the PM, saying, \"Drama is not allowing democratic discussions about issues that matter to public.

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