Students protest against links with Israel

Louise Nousratpour
Thursday January 22, 2009
The Morning Star

STUDENTS at Oxford University joined the wave of occupations on campuses across Britain on Thursday demanding that the institutions sever their links with arms companies that supply weapons to Israel.

They joined students from the School of Oriental and African Studies, King's College London, Warwick, Essex, Birmingham, Sussex and Newcastle to demonstrate their disgust at British universities' support for Israel's war and occupation in Palestine.

Activists are calling on university authorities to issue a formal statement condemning Israel's brutal attacks on Gaza, which have left more than 1,000 people dead, including 300 children.

They also want the institutions to sever all links with arms companies such as BAE Systems, MBDA, GE Aviation and QinetiQ, provide fully funded scholarships for Palestinian students and establish links with educational institutions in Gaza.

Warwick University student Chris Rossdale said: "It is wrong that our university profits from the destruction in Gaza. Students pay a substantial amount towards our education and we expect a say in where that money goes."

National Union of Students executive member Rob Owen condemned his union's "neutral" stance on the Gaza issue as a "disgrace."

He said: "By refusing to take sides, the union has effectively taken a zionist position and has become more and more disconnected with its rank-and-file members. The leadership has even written a letter to the Stop the War Coalition, complaining that the recent demonstrations in support of Gaza were 'anti-semitic'."

Mr Owen vowed to continue to fight the "right-wing" tendencies within the NUS and urged other trade unions to support the university occupations.

Stewart Halfort of the Stop the War Coalition, which is involved in the students' occupations, hailed the event as "the rebirth of the student movement."

He pointed out that there had not been university occupations on this scale since the anti-apartheid movement in the 1980s.

London School of Economics (LSE) students ended their seven-day occupation of a lecture theatre with a declaration of victory on Thursday after winning all of their demands.

LSE director Howard Davies will now make a public statement about the Israeli bombing of academic institutions, organisers revealed.

The LSE has also agreed to provide scholarships for students who have been affected by the Israeli occupation and to facilitate a charity collection for Medical Aid for Palestine.

King's College London students, who enter their fifth day of action today, want the authorities to revoke the honorary doctorate that was bestowed on Israeli President Shimon Peres last year.

Cracking down on peaceful protest


LOUISE NOUSRATPOUR reports on the police violence at the Free Gaza demonstration in London.

The Morning Star
Sunday January 11, 2009


THE ever-loyal mainstream media once again blamed "violent" protesters for the police brutality outside the Israeli embassy on Saturday, insisting that officers were "forced" to act.

But those of us who were at the scene know that the media's account of events is, at best, shamelessly biased.

As we approached the heavily guarded Israeli embassy, emotions ran high and the chanting got louder: "Gaza, Gaza, Don't You Cry, We Will Never Let You Die" and "Free, Free Palestine."

Some protesters hurled shoes at the gates and burnt an Israeli flag. We also heard a loud bang that was later identified as firecrackers being thrown inside the gates leading up to the embassy.

As the crowd began to swell, stewards urged demonstrators to march forward. Rather than opening up space, the police lined up behind the crowd control barriers and tightened the squeeze.

Suddenly, we felt a violent push and people started shouting: "Stop pushing, stop pushing."

At first, we thought it was protesters trying to squeeze through, but soon it became clear that the riot police had moved in, forcing a wedge through the crowd.

"Stop pushing, you pigs," someone shouted. "There are children in the crowd."

But that fell on deaf ears. My friends and I tried to move to the side to find a way out, unaware that the police had not removed the barriers that separated the street from the pavement.

Suddenly, we found ourselves trapped between the crowd and the barriers. A steward tried to help people climb over and a desperate mother lifted her little boy, hoping someone would fetch him.

With chillingly vacant eyes and batons drawn, the police stood by idly watching people slowly trip over the fence and get crushed in the stampede.

As the fence went down, my leg got trapped and it took me a few anxious minutes to pull loose and escape with minor injuries.

Panic rippled through the crowd as riot police, backed by dozens of mounted officers and helicopters, charged the protesters, batoning anyone in their way.

As I hobbled away from the scene to take shelter in one of the nearby doorways, I came across two 16-year-old girls who had been beaten up by the police. One of them was so badly shaken and hurt that she could neither walk nor talk.

We also heard others saying that they had seen bloody faces and people being dragged along the ground.

The sense of solidarity with the Palestinians grew stronger as people began to draw parallels between our entrapment and what the Gazans were going through every day - though on a much larger and more terrifying scale.

We began to truly imagine how it must feel to be fenced in and attacked from all sides with nowhere to run and only sticks and stones as defence weapons, a true David and Goliath battle.

Solidarity also grew among the crowd, with the uninjured helping those people who had been hurt and carrying them to safety. We must now continue to demonstrate our disgust at Israel's massacre and let the Gazans know that the people of the world are on their side, despite the apparent failure of the so-called international community to save them.