Oxford and Cambridge Students Establish Protest Camps in Support of Gaza

13 days ago
Oxford and Cambridge Students Establish Protest Camps in Support of Gaza

Student-led initiatives at the esteemed universities of Oxford and Cambridge in Britain saw the establishment of encampments in solidarity with Gaza this Monday, adding to the wave of student protests making their way across the UK.

Social media is buzzing with videos showcasing the sight of rows of tents set up on campus lawns, accompanied by banners bearing the welcoming message: “Step into the People’s University for Palestine.” The scenes are further enriched by the presence of numerous students adorned in the classic keffiyeh scarf, embodying a spirit of solidarity and cultural pride.

According to a recent joint press release by the newly-established Oxford Action for Palestine (OA4P) and Cambridge for Palestine (C4P), tents were pitched outside the Pitt Rivers Museum at the University of Oxford and on the lawn of King’s College at the University of Cambridge.

“As members of these institutions, we refuse to accept our universities’ complicity in Israel’s war crimes against the Palestinian people – and we refuse to stand by while they justify Israel’s campaign of mass slaughter, starvation, and displacement,” the statement said.

“Our universities’ wealth and prestige stem directly from their role in the British Empire and its disastrous colonial legacies, including the Oxford and Cambridge men who authored the Balfour Declaration in 1917, ceding Palestinian land to the Zionist settler-colonial project,” it said.

“In 2024, these universities may claim to be confronting their role in historic colonial violence – but their words ring hollow while they lend financial and moral support to Israel’s genocide, occupation, and ongoing colonisation of Palestine,” it added.

The students want their universities to disclose and divest from “financial and professional support” of the war in Gaza.

“As members of these institutions, we refuse to accept our universities’ complicity in Israel’s war crimes against the Palestinian people – and we refuse to stand by while they justify Israel’s campaign of mass slaughter, starvation, and displacement,” the statement said.

The sit-in protests, which echo protests similar actions in the US, have sprung up at other British universities including Manchester, Leeds, Bristol, Sheffield and Newcastle over the last week.

A University of Cambridge spokesperson said: “The University is fully committed to academic freedom and freedom of speech within the law and we acknowledge the right to protest. We ask everyone in our community to treat each other with understanding and empathy. Our priority is the safety of all staff and students.

“We will not tolerate antisemitism, Islamophobia and any other form of racial or religious hatred, or other unlawful activity.”

In Oxford, 108 lecturers, faculty members and researchers from multiple colleges have signed an open letter, saying they “stand firmly in support of the members of the university community who have begun an encampment outside the Pitt Rivers Museum”.

The anti-war protests have been staged in response to Israel’s relentless and indiscriminate attack on Gaza, which has killed over 34,700 people – most of whom were women and children, and flattened the Palestinian territory. 

Israel has been accused of genocide and war crimes by governments and NGOs as a result of its actions in the Palestinian enclave


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