Several tents have gone up on McGill’s downtown campus in what students are calling an act of solidarity with the Palestinian cause, joining a wave of similar protests taking place across U.S. campuses amid the ongoing Israel-Hamas war. 

On Saturday afternoon, organizers could be heard asking over loudspeakers that as many people as possible stay at the encampment overnight. 

Protestors are demanding McGill and Concordia universities “divest from funds implicated in the Zionist state as well as [cut] ties with Zionist academic institutions,” according to a statement sent to CBC News by Zaynab Ali, a McGill student participating in the protest.

Ali was referencing a data set published on April 18 by McGill Hunger Strike for Palestine and Students for Justice in Palestine. It lists 50 companies that McGill University invests in that the organizations say are “complicit in upholding the apartheid regime of Israel.” CBC News reached out to the university about the data set on Saturday evening.

Israel launched its war against Hamas after the militant group’s attacks on Oct. 7. During the attacks, some 1,200 people were killed and around 250 were taken hostage, according to Israeli tallies. More than 130 hostages are still being held in Gaza, including women and children.

Israel’s offensive in Gaza has killed more than 34,000 Palestinians, according to health authorities in Hamas-ruled Gaza.

A list of needs (fruits, snacks, coffee etc.) taped to a banner.
On Saturday afternoon, organizers were heard asking that as many people as possible stay at the encampment overnight. (Jennifer Yoon/CBC)

The Montreal chapter of the Palestinian Youth Movement called the encampment “indefinite,” adding that it refuses to let universities “be complicit in genocide,” in a social media post on Instagram. 

Another student group, Solidarité pour les droits humains des Palestiniennes et Palestiniens also urged UQAM’s students and personnel to join in as well, in a post to Facebook. 

In an email to CBC News, McGill University says it’s aware the encampment is happening and it supports the right of its students to freedom of expression and freedom of assembly within the bounds of the university’s policies and law. It says its security officers are on site.



Source link www.cbc.ca