As Israel continues to threaten a ground invasion of Rafah — where more than 1 million people are sheltering from its genocidal assault on Gaza — students around the world have pitched tents at campuses to protest their universities' complicity in the genocide.
The first student encampment was set up at Columbia University in the United States on April 17, and quickly spread across the country.
Students are calling on their universities to divest from weapons manufacturers and other companies supporting Israel’s genocide.
In response, police have attacked the encampments, arresting hundreds of students and sparking community outrage and protests.
Students at the University of Sydney (USyd) and the University of Melbourne (UoM) set up encampments in solidarity with US students on April 22 and April 25. They demanded their universities scrap deals with weapons companies, Israeli universities and the US Department of Defense.
One UoM student involved in setting up the encampment said they were “camping out in solidarity with the Palestinian people and in protest of Melbourne unis ties to apartheid Israel”.
“Our university is complicit in the ongoing genocide in Palestine and students across the world are standing up and fighting back.”
Another student said it was important for “students, staff and union members to support the encampment”.
“We know that all universities in Gaza have been destroyed and the University of Melbourne has financial and educational relationships with some of the companies involved in this bloodshed, including Lockheed Martin, BAE Systems, Rosebank, Boeing and many others.”
Students at the University of Queensland established a Gaza solidarity camp on April 29 and students at Curtin University in Boorloo/Perth are organising a rally on May 1 to launch their solidarity encampment.
The encampments were hailed by speakers at the Palestine rally in Gadigal/Sydney on April 28, as thousands rallied to mark more than 200 days since Israel launched its latest genocidal attack. With the death toll in Gaza estimated to be more than 40,000, protesters called out Australia’s ongoing complicity in the genocide.
Peter Boyle reported that along with an organiser of the USyd encampment and a 10-year-old Palestinian boy, the protest was addressed by Professor Mazin Qumsiyeh, a Bethlehem-based Palestinian environmental justice activist, who is on a speaking tour of Australia and Aotearoa/New Zealand.
Qumsiyeh told the rally: “As Martin Luther King said, peace means peace with justice and we are not going to get peace if we don’t work for it. Freedom is never handed on a silver platter to us…
“When I look at your diverse faces, it gives me hope because we have seen who is the enemy. The enemy is a tiny minority who control this world and profit from the deals like the deals between the military in Australia and Israel, providing weapons for genocide.”
Chloe DS reported that the weekly protest in Naarm/Melbourne is growing in size. More than 10,000 people joined the rally on April 28. They called on the federal and Victorian governments to stop supporting the production of weapons components and break all ties with Israel.
Speakers included former Maritime Union of Australia Victorian branch secretary Kevin Bracken, Palestinian activist and civil engineer Basil El-Ghattis, Jiselle Hanna from Australia Asia Worker Links, Jordy Silverstein from the Loud Jew Collective and Palestinian-Australian Nada Khartabil.
About 500 people joined the rally in Boorloo/Perth on April 27 to demand Labor end its complicity in the genocide and impose an immediate arms embargo on Israel. Protesters also called on the government to expel the Israeli ambassador and recall Australia’s ambassador from Tel Aviv.
After hearing from various speakers, protesters marched through the city, stopping twice to stage die-ins to commemorate the Al-Shifa hospital massacres, which resulted in more than 1500 people being killed, injured or disappeared by the Israeli military.
Unionists for Palestine (UFP) WA organised a third community picket against Israel’s ZIM shipping company at Walyalup/Fremantle Port in Boorloo/Perth on April 28.
UFPWA organiser Riley Breen told 鶹ý the police attempted to intimidate picketers by targeting marshalls and organisers first, but protesters were not deterred.
Activists staged a die-in at Kaurna Yerta/Adelaide’s Rundle Mall on April 28 reported Jordan Ellis. “Israel can no longer hide its atrocities from the world. Every day, more of Israel's crimes against the Palestinians are revealed,” organisers said.
“Most recently, mass graves were found in three hospitals in the Gaza Strip containing 700 bodies … women, children and elderly Palestinians who were tortured and executed by the [Israeli Occupation Forces].”