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Teenagers dismissed from school for hugging

Two teenagers in southern India school have been expelled for a public display of affection.

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The girl, a Class 11 student, was embraced by the senior boy in front of the audience after she got the first prize for singing American singer John Legend’s "All of Me" in the Western musical contest on July 21.

Principal Sebastian T Joseph summoned the parents of both the students soon after the incident. They tendered a written apology but the school’s management suspended them in August.

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They were expelled in November and the boy’s parents approached the state children’s commission which directed the school to take them back.

However, the school later challenged the commission’s order in the high court. The high court upheld the school's decision, saying it was the principal’s responsibility to maintain decorum and morality inside the campus and dismissed the children commission’s directive to continue their education.

Both the students claim it was a mutual congratulatory hug that lasted only a few seconds but the school said it was a prolonged hug and they violated the discipline.

"It was a friendly mutual hug. My friend was happy with the way I sang. Both of us never expected things will come to such a pass. Our future is bleak since many schools that came to know about this are denying chances to continue education," the girl told the Hindustan Times.

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She said school authorities later forced her to give an undertaking that it was not a mutual hug but a forced one to avoid initiating action against her. She said she refused and was expelled from the school in November.

The girl alleged that the school authorities later hacked into her Instagram account and procured some other photos to portray both of them in a bad light. Parents of both the students said they were humiliated by the school management.

The Class 12 student has said he will appeal against the high court order so that he can appear for his board examination next year.

According to the boy’s father, the congratulatory hug was blown out of proportion by the school authorities and it completely “demoralised” his son.

However, the school said that it did it in the best interest of the institution and all are bound to go by its rules of discipline and decorum. It said both were warned when they were hugging but they prolonged it and insulted the teacher who asked them to stop it.

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"We don’t want to rake it up again. Since the high court has given a verdict everyone has to accept it," school’s principal Joseph said.

The school authorities maintained that the boy was suspended in order to discipline him and it was up to the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) to take a call on the matter. "We have no problem if the CBSE allows him to take the exam," Joseph said.

He, however, said that the student did not have the requisite attendance.

"Our intention is to reform the child, not to break him, but to make him," the principal told news agency Press Trust of India.

Joseph claimed that the student was allowed to appear for an examination in September even after an inquiry panel of teachers had found that the "five-minute-long hug" was intentional and with bad intentions".

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His father said that they were planning to appeal against the single bench’s order and alleged that his child was subjected to humiliation.

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