Palestine: Students gear up to force universities to break ties with weapons companies

August 29, 2024
Issue 
Queuing to vote to cut ties with genocide at the University of Queensland. Photo: Alex Bainbridge

Deakin became the latest university where students passed a pro-Palestine motion at a general meeting, on August 28.

础产辞耻迟听1500 students debated and passed a motion,聽in May, calling on the聽University of Queensland (UQ) to divest from weapons companies.

Almost 1000 students聽voted at the University of Sydney聽(USyd) on August 7 in favour of two pro-Palestine motions.

Since then, similar motions have been passed by students at the University of Melbourne and the University of Adelaide.

Six hundred students defied harassment by the Queensland University of Technology management to vote up a motion on August 15 calling for divestment from weapons companies profiting from genocide.

USyd Education Officer Grace Street told聽麻豆传媒聽she thinks it is 鈥渁mazing鈥 how far reaching the student solidarity movement for Palestine has become.

She said the SGMs this semester have been influenced by the student encampments set up across the country earlier in the year. 鈥淭hey highlighted that Palestine has the support of the broader community and especially the students.鈥

鈥淲e know, from history, that the students are generally on the right side of history and leading these fights for social justice.鈥

Long-time USyd staff have told Street that student solidarity with Palestine on campus reminds them of anti-war student activism during the Vietnam War and other iconic society-wide struggles.

In Street鈥檚 view, the return to forms of direct community action is significant after 鈥渄ecades of the neoliberal university鈥, characterised by 鈥渋ndividualism and apoliticism鈥.

The student movement has taken aim at university links with weapons companies.

Student activist Sam Morris told聽GL聽that the Boeing Centre at UQ is a major target. Boeing produces Joint Direct Attack Munitions (JDAMs), a type of guided bomb.

UQ has also disclosed two other partnerships with weapons manufacturers Lockheed Martin and MBDA UK.

鈥淟ockheed Martin is a big one,鈥 Morris said, 鈥渂ecause they鈥檙e the manufacturer of the F35 fighter, which Israel is using to bomb Gaza鈥.

UQ also has $12 million indirectly invested in Airbnb and Booking.com, both of which are listed on the United Nations Human Rights Council聽聽of companies complicit in the occupation of the West Bank.

Morris said this makes UQ complicit in Israel鈥檚 genocide against the people of Gaza.

UQ has been forced to disclose that it receives $37.9 million from the US Department of Defense. It claims this is mostly for 鈥渉ealth-related research,鈥 but a lot of military expenditure can be disguised under such labels.

Student campaigners at USyd are targeting weapons company Thales, because students do 鈥渘ot want to have warmongering companies on campus鈥.

USyd management wants to 鈥渆mphasise that the current research with Thales was just about robotic systems,鈥 Street said.

鈥淏ut, if you dig into that a bit further, these robotic systems could be used for anything, particularly unmanned military vehicles [and drones].鈥

A lot of students are unaware of the university鈥檚 ties to weapons corporations, she said, so a big part of the campaign is focused on exposing the connections.

鈥淭here is still that information gap,鈥 Street said, and the semester one encampment was 鈥渧ery useful in locating that fight [in Palestine] here and showing the breadth of complicity, not just in government but through institutions [like the university]鈥.

The semester one encampments did manage to secure 鈥渄isclosure鈥 agreements from some universities, including USyd and UQ.

But management is attempting to look like they are transparent and give the impression they are 鈥渨orking towards ethics, but we know that鈥檚 a lie鈥, Street said.

Street said the 鈥渄isclosure鈥 agreement at USyd was a commitment to review investment policies about ties to military industries.聽Street said this聽is聽鈥渄efinitely not a win鈥, but merely 鈥減aying lip service鈥 so the university doesn鈥檛 鈥渉ave to engage with our demands further鈥.

As proof of that, the university has appointed multiple pro-Zionist figures to its Investment Policies Review Working Group.

Morris said the disclosure agreement at UQ is 鈥渁 mixed bag鈥: It was a 鈥渨in for the university鈥 because it released some of the pressure from the encampment, however, it also 鈥渟howed us that the university was really feeling the heat鈥.

USyd released a聽聽on August 8 responding to the SGM of the day before.

The statement 鈥渦nequivocally鈥 condemned 鈥渧iolence, terrorism, and any violations of human rights鈥.

However, it made clear that the 鈥渧iolence鈥 it condemned included expressions of 鈥渟upport for Hamas鈥. At the same time it was studiously silent about the genocide being committed by Israel, with Australian complicity.

UQ also tried to ban some forms of student expression, including some chants.

Street said聽that the Labor government faces a lot of shame for its complicity in genocide. She is aware that this is a 鈥渓ong-term campaign鈥 but, based on experience from the anti-Apartheid campaign in South Africa including support from across the globe, when pressure builds regimes can 鈥渏ust topple鈥.

鈥淲e need to keep the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign (BDS) at the centre,鈥 Street said. We need to find ways to 鈥渒eep momentum鈥 and to 鈥渉it targets where it hurts鈥.

Everyone can contribute to boycotts and divestment, either individually or institutionally, she said. 鈥淗opefully, one day we鈥檒l get [government] sanctions [on Israel].鈥

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