Students call on University of New England to disclose, divest from Israel

May 27, 2024
Issue 
Banner drop for Palestine at the University of New England. Photo: Armidale Friends of Palestine

Armidale Friends of Palestine聽and the community protested Israel鈥檚 war on Gaza by unfurling a six-metre flag on the University of New England (UNE) campus on May 26.

Students led chants, calling for a ceasefire and a free Palestine.

Shaz, a student engagement leader at the Indigenous Students Association, spoke about their experience of colonialism as a First Nations person, reminding the protest that Sorry Day is an opportunity to acknowledge many wrongdoings.

鈥淗ow are we acknowledging one genocide and not the other?,鈥 asked Shaz, adding, 鈥淚 feel we should also have our brothers and sisters in Gaza in our hearts today.鈥

Tian, secretary of the NSW Young Greens, told the protest that they 鈥渉ave the right to know whether our university is taking part in Israel鈥檚 genocidal settler colonial project鈥.

Elena, from the Australian Communist Party, told the protest that they could not 鈥渃ampaign聽for accessible housing without remembering the people of Gaza living in tents. I cannot want better access to medical care without remembering that every hospital in Gaza has been bombed, that surgeons are being forced to work without anaesthesia.鈥

Speakers referenced a letter that they had sent to UNE鈥檚 vice-chancellor, Chris Moran. It read, in part, that while the University of New England is 鈥渁 regional university ... it has ties across the globe鈥, meaning that 鈥淸i]t cannot avoid answering the same questions that other universities have been made to answer.鈥

The group reiterated the demands made in their letter, calling on university management to sign the international Boycott Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) statement. The demands also included asking the university to publicly disclose any ties with Israel鈥檚 government, Israeli companies, and weapons鈥 companies, including but not limited to Thales, Lockheed Martin and Elbit.

Protest organisers said the community has no real way of knowing whether they are being made complicit in a genocide because the university, an important part of the community, has not disclosed its聽investments and research ties.

The order from the International Court of Justice, handed down on May 24 calling for an end to Israel's invasion, spurred the protestors on.

The organisers said that acting ethically, with a basic respect for human life, demanded immediate action.

The students promised to continue their efforts, saying that the UNE cannot rely on its location to protect it from answering the hard questions.

One organiser told 麻豆传媒:聽鈥淲e can all see the unceasing, genocidal actions of Israel. We聽can all see that our university and government have done nothing. We will not remain silent. We聽will stand with other students around the globe protesting what is happening.鈥

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