Harassing juniors through informal WhatsApp groups to be treated as ragging: UGC
Press Trust of India | July 9, 2025 | 09:21 AM IST | 1 min read
The UGC said it receives multiple complaints from freshers each year, with seniors often using WhatsApp groups to harass juniors—an act that also qualifies as ragging and will attract disciplinary action.
NEW DELHI: The University Grants Commission (UGC) has directed higher education institutions to monitor any informal WhatsApp groups created to harass juniors, saying it will be treated as ragging and attract strict action under anti-ragging rules, according to officials. The UGC receives dozens of complaints every year from freshers alleging harassment by seniors.
"In several cases, seniors form informal WhatsApp groups, contact juniors and subject them to mental harassment. This too amounts to ragging and will invite disciplinary measures," the UGC said in its latest directive. "Student safety on campus is paramount and non-negotiable. Failure to enforce anti-ragging norms may lead to stringent action, including withholding of grants," it warned.
Threat of social boycott highlighted
The advisory also flagged incidents where juniors were threatened with social boycott if they did not follow seniors' instructions. Forcing students to cut their hair, stay awake for long hours or verbally humiliating them were cited as other common ragging practices . "Such acts cause physical and psychological distress and are serious violations of anti-ragging regulations and completely unacceptable," it said.
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