- The desire for highly-paid jobs and the demands of overbearing
parents has caused a suicide epidemic among students in India.
-
- Adolescent girls are up to 70 times more likely to kill
themselves than in Britain, research has shown.
-
- The figures have led to calls for a radical overhaul
of India's equivalent of the A-level, the CBSE.
-
- The exam, which comes at the end of 13 years of intensive
schooling, offers a lucky few the chance to take the opportunities thrown
up by India's position as a rapidly emerging economic power.
-
- But for those missing out on a "golden ticket"
to a better life there are heavy costs, both financial and emotional.
-
- Almost daily, there are reports of suicide by youngsters
unable to bear the shame, or the fear, of failing to get to university.
-
- Conversely, students who go to India's leading institutions,
which rival Harvard and Oxbridge for excellence, are lauded as high achievers
who command enormous salaries when they land jobs with multinationals.
-
- The stories are as commonplace as they are heartbreaking.
That of Sudhanshu Pandey, a 17-year-old from New Delhi stood out when his
suicide note was published in Indian Today.
-
- "Bye everybody, I am committing suicide," he
wrote before hanging himself from a ceiling fan by his mother's saree.
"I have decided to end my life because the pressure has started to
get to me and I cannot take it any longer.
-
- "I love my family and I hope they will understand."
-
- A study in Vellore, south India, published in The Lancet
last year showed suicides among young women (15 to 19) running at 148 per
100,000 population, against 58 per 100,000 for young men.
-
- In Britain, the rate for young women is 2.1 per 100,000,
against a world average among all age groups of 14.5 per 100,000. Young
Indian men are almost 30 times more likely to commit suicide than their
British counterparts.
-
- The figures have caused alarm at the intolerable burden
imposed by the hothouse approach to schooling.
-
- Misguided parents are at the heart of the problem, said
P V Sankaranarayanan, of Sneha, a charity that runs a helpline for students
in Madras.
-
- They are often so desperate for their children to succeed
that they take time off work to "actively manage" their child's
study while other family members take on extra jobs to pay for private
tuition.
-
- "The pressures are manifold," Mr Sankaranarayanan
said. "Will I gain my required marks? Will I satisfy my parents? Will
I get on my preferred course? And if they don't, often the feeling is of
overwhelming shame and guilt."
-
- For girls, that pressure to succeed is even greater than
for boys, a factor that explains the huge discrepancy in suicides between
boys and girls, says Dr Anuradha Bose, a paediatrician who contributed
to the Lancet report.
-
- "The girls feel extra pressure because at the first
hint of failure they are removed from school, while boys will receive any
spare resources a family might have for extra help and tuition.
-
- "The girls meanwhile, have few options except marriage
- often at a young age - and domestic service. Suicide is one way out.
If this was an infectious disease, we would be looking for a vaccine".
-
- © Copyright of Telegraph Group Limited 2005.
-
- http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/07/28
/wsuic28.xml&sSheet=/news/2005/07/28/ixworld.html
|