Fri, 19 Jun 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jun 19, 2026 · 12:15
Maharashtra News Updated Jun 19, 2026

Six Gujarat Medical Students Suspended in Bhavnagar College Ragging Case

Six students of Government Medical College in Bhavnagar, Gujarat, have been suspended and removed from the hostel following a ragging complaint. The Anti-Ragging Committee, after a nine-hour meeting, imposed penalties ranging from six months to two years of suspension. Health Minister Praful Pansheriya stated the government has a zero-tolerance policy towards ragging. He urged students to immediately report any incidents of harassment to college authorities.

Six Gujarat students suspended, removed from hostel in Bhavnagar Medical College ragging case

Gandhinagar/Bhavnagar, June 19 Gujarat's Health Department has ordered strict disciplinary action against six students of the Government Medical College in Bhavnagar after an investigation into a ragging complaint found them guilty, with one student suspended for two years and all six ordered to vacate their hostel rooms immediately.

The action followed a marathon meeting of the college's Anti-Ragging Committee, which began at 5 p.m. on June 18 and continued until 2 a.m. on Friday.

The meeting was convened on the instructions of State Health Minister Praful Pansheriya after the alleged ragging incident was reported.

According to the Health Department, the case was treated with urgency by officials in Gandhinagar, the Additional Director and the Anti-Ragging Committee.

During the nine-hour meeting, written statements were obtained from first-year, second-year and third-year students of the Orthopaedics Department, as well as from concerned faculty members and support staff.

The committee also conducted a detailed review of available documentary evidence before reaching its conclusions.

Based on the findings of the inquiry and following directions from the Health Minister, the Anti-Ragging Committee imposed disciplinary penalties on the students found responsible for the incident.

One student has been suspended from the college for two years, while three students have been suspended for one year. Two other students have been suspended for six months.

All six students have been ordered to leave the hostel with immediate effect and were directed to vacate their rooms and inform the college administration by the evening.

The Health Department said the suspended students will not be allowed to participate in any academic, clinical, research or other college-related activities during the period of their punishment.

Pansheriya said the state government would not tolerate ragging or any behaviour that compromises the safety and dignity of students.

"There will be no compromise on the safety and dignity of students. The state government's policy towards ragging is one of zero tolerance," Pansheriya said.

He stated that antisocial, inhuman and indisciplined activities such as ragging would not be tolerated under any circumstances in any medical college in Gujarat.

He added that "the state government, under the guidance of Chief Minister Bhupendra Patel, remains committed to maintaining student safety, dignity and a healthy academic environment and would continue to take strict action against such incidents".

Pansheriya also praised officials of the Health Department, the Additional Director, the college administration and members of the Anti-Ragging Committee for completing the investigation within two days of the complaint and taking time-bound action against those found responsible.

"Officials worked in continuous coordination until 2 a.m. to ensure a fair inquiry, evaluate evidence and deliver prompt action in the case," he said.

Addressing students across the state, Pansheriya urged anyone facing ragging, mental harassment, coercion, threats or any other form of inhuman treatment to immediately report the matter to their college's Anti-Ragging Committee, the college administration or other competent authorities.

"No student should tolerate such pressure or inhuman acts. The Anti-Ragging Committee and the Health Department are fully committed to the safety and justice of every student, and every complaint received will be acted upon promptly and strictly," he said.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

While I appreciate the swift action, I hope the investigation was thorough and fair. Often, in such cases, juniors might exaggerate to settle scores, or seniors might be wrongly accused. But still, ragging ruins lives, so zero tolerance is the way forward. Let's hope this becomes a deterrent for others.

Vikram M

Sab log bolte hain 'ragging to tradition hai' - but it's nothing but bullying. Ye log medical students hain, they're supposed to save lives, not traumatize others. Good that Gujarat government has shown spine. Other states should follow suit, especially in private colleges where such incidents are swept under the rug.

Michael C

As someone from the US who has worked in Indian healthcare, I've heard horrific stories about ragging. This is a great step but I wonder if the hostel removal is too harsh for a first-time offense for some of these students? Shouldn't there be counseling and rehabilitation alongside punishment? Just a thought.

Rohit P

Excellent! I was ragged in my first year of engineering in 2015 and nobody did anything. The college administration said 'it's part of life' and we should adjust. This kind of prompt action gives hope to current first-year students. Proud of Gujarat government for keeping their word on zero tolerance. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳

Sarah B

Impressive how quickly this was handled - 9-hour meeting until 2am shows real commitment. But I'm curious: what specific acts of ragging occurred? Transparency in such cases helps build trust in the system. Also, hope the victim student is getting proper psychological support. Ragging can leave deep scars.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked