Australian vice-chancellors have so far resisted pressure to disband pro-Palestinian encampments on their campuses, amid escalating protest action and demands for crackdowns.
Administrators at three universities have instructed students to dismantle the camps and 鈥 in one case 鈥 cease occupying a university building, citing 鈥渃onsiderable damage鈥 and threats to health and safety. However, the directives are yet to be enforced.
The University of Melbourne said it was consulting police after students and 鈥渆xternal actors鈥 occupied the Arts West building on the university鈥檚 Parkville campus, spurning directions to leave and forcing the cancellation of 150 classes.
鈥淲e are in ongoing discussions with the police,鈥 deputy vice-chancellor Michael Wesley said in a statement. 鈥淭hey are advising us about how we keep this situation under control and鈥ow we might move forward to end the protests and the occupation.
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鈥淪tudents have a right to protest but that is not a blank cheque. They鈥rossed a line when they occupied the Arts West building. The university鈥檚 patience is now at an end.鈥
Australian National University told students to leave a protest camp by 17 May 鈥渇or the purposes of health and safety and good order of the campus鈥.
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In letters to seven students, deputy vice-chancellor Grady Venville said the university was not disciplining them over the encampment or limiting their right to protest peacefully elsewhere.
Meanwhile, students at Deakin University have defied requests to dismantle an encampment at Morgan鈥檚 Walk, the main pedestrian thoroughfare at the university鈥檚 Burwood campus, following reports of unacceptable behaviour.
鈥淲e cannot allow vitriol, personal attack and intimidation to undermine our ability to engage in the considered debate, discussion and deliberation that is required to meaningfully address complex and challenging issues,鈥 vice-chancellor Iain Martin said in a 聽posted on the university鈥檚 website.
Administrators鈥 failure to enforce their instructions has reportedly enraged prominent members of Australia鈥檚 Jewish community, with former federal treasurer Josh Frydenberg 鈥 presenter of a forthcoming documentary on antisemitism 鈥撀犅爐o expel the 鈥渃amps of hate鈥 from their campuses.
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Campus resource collection: What can universities do to protect academic freedom?
The Executive Council of Australian Jewry, which has been demanding the camps鈥 disbandment since late April, called for 鈥渟trong and decisive鈥 action from vice-chancellors. 鈥淭he time for indulging and appeasing insolent children running amok has passed,鈥 co-chief executive Alex Ryvchin told聽. 鈥淚f the university can鈥檛 ensure the immediate safety and security of all students and staff, the police need to.鈥
Former Australian chief scientist and Monash University chancellor Alan Finkel said vice-chancellors were being judged harshly because of past failures to 鈥渉onour the tradition of freedom of speech鈥. He said universities had occasionally cancelled scheduled appearances by visiting speakers over concerns that they might offend listeners.
鈥淯niversities have not been perfect in the past, and a lot of people have jumped to judge them negatively in the case of the encampments. They鈥檙e saying: 鈥楾he university is allowing voices that previously it would have shut down on some other topic.鈥欌
Dr Finkel said speakers should be cancelled only if their words were likely to incite hatred or violence. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think universities have always interpreted that well in the past, but at this moment they鈥檙e trying to.鈥
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