11 Aralık 2013 Çarşamba

Students in "national day of action" over police violence on campus

Students protest in London

College students protesting in London. Photograph: Rachel Megawhat/Demotix/Corbis




Above a thousand college students took to the streets in central London on Wednesday, even though other people protested close to the United kingdom towards the police presence on campus.


Tensions in between students and the police have grown in the previous couple of months following officers had been caught on camera attempting to recruit college students to spy on activists in Cambridge.


On what was labelled a “national day of action”, many protesters also wanted to make a stand towards the privatisation of university jobs and amenities, the reduced spend and bad problems of workers and the death of Mark Duggan.


The demonstration at the University of London Union started out with a largely peaceful ambiance. Clowns and a samba band amused the crowds and there was no evident police presence.


Later on, college students broke via closed gates into an region alongside the University of London Senate developing in Bloomsbury, with shouts of “cops out, students in”.


For the duration of the protest, demonstrators also set a bin on fire, attacked a police automobile, let off flares and chanted: “College students and employees – unite and fight”, and “No justice, no peace, fuck the police”.


Michael Chessum, of the Nationwide Association towards Cuts and Fees, mentioned: “There is something brewing on a national degree, which we have not seen in a amount of years.


“As effectively as police presence on campus, we’re protesting against workers’ struggles, campus democracy, and we have a generalised anti-privatisation message.”


The protest moved through Trafalgar Square, Piccadilly, Hyde Park Corner and Holborn. Numerous took to Twitter to demonstrate their help making use of the hashtag #copsoffcampus.


Students, academics and university employees from close to the nation travelled to the capital to get portion in the demonstration, as effectively as setting up equivalent rallies across the nation.


Nadine El-Enany, law lecturer at Birkbeck, mentioned: “Workers are here to display their solidarity with students and to show that our fight is the very same fight.


“College students assistance us on the picket lines when we’ve been on strike just before in recent weeks, so we’re here to help college students who are brutalised by police. I think the fight is going to carry on.”


Isobel Urquhart, a Cambridge academic, said: “There looks to be more knowing of the wants for personnel and students to mix and there is more work now to involve employees employees.”


Pupil union officers from Bristol also took part in the protest and wore Christmas outfits and brandished festive banners in a bid to highlight peaceful protest.


Ellie Williams, of Bristol students union, stated: “We’re wearing our Christmas jumpers and Christmas hats since there seems to be an ambiance all around protesting that is very angry, masculine and aggressive and we needed to challenge that.”


Ben Glinecki, a Cambridge graduate who attended the protest, explained: “The police have provoked this. Their heavy-handed tactics have brought a lot more folks out onto the streets.”


The protest comes just a day right after Sussex University unexpectedly lifted its ban on five college students – recognized as the ‘Farthing Five’, after the university’s vice-chancellor – who had taken element in protests.


Adriano Marotta, a single of the students who was suspended, was at the protest. He mentioned: “We want our voices to be heard. We really feel like the police are attempting to silence student groups.”




Students in "national day of action" over police violence on campus

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