Medicine Hat News

Smith ‘glad’ Gaza protest in Calgary ended as encampment­s escalate

- DEAN BENNETT

Premier Danielle Smith says she’s pleased the University of Calgary moved to have police dismantle an on-campus pro-Palestinia­n protest and hopes the University of Alberta will take note.

Smith’s comment comes as the head of the University of Calgary said the dismantlin­g of the encampment Thursday night derailed into a clash with police because of counter-protesters.

Also Friday, a similar protest that began with one tent at the University of Alberta campus in Edmonton mushroomed to about 35.

Smith, speaking at an unrelated news conference in Calgary, said her government is on hand to help if asked but will otherwise leave decisions of what to do with the protest encampment­s up to the universiti­es.

She said peaceful protest is fine, but rules must be followed and students’ education should not be disrupted.

“I’m glad that the University of Calgary made the decision that they did,” Smith said.

“I think what they found in Calgary is that a large number who were trespassin­g were not students, and we have to be mindful of that.

“Kids are having graduation ceremonies. A lot of these kids didn’t get a graduation ceremony for high school. It’s not fair for them or their families to be disrupted.”

She added, “I’ll watch and see what the University of Alberta learns from what they observed in Calgary.”

The Calgary protest began early Thursday, as shelters and fencing were erected as part of the encampment.

The university issued protesters a trespass notice. When they would not disperse, police were called in.

The protest reached a peak of about 150 people in the early evening. By about 11 p.m. most had left, but the small number that stayed clashed with officers. Police set off flashbang explosives and tear gas and made arrests.

“Unfortunat­ely, counterpro­testers showed up — also putting themselves in violation of our policies and in a trespass situation,” University of Calgary president Ed McCauley said in a statement.

“The situation very quickly devolved into shoving, projectile­s being thrown at officers and — ultimately — flashbangs and arrests.”

McCauley said the university respects and values protests within the confines of the school’s safe operation.

Calgary Chief Const. Mark Neufeld said the protest was peaceful to begin with, but several people there, who were not students, were known to take part in other protests.

“There were individual­s from the very start that were saying, ‘We’re not leaving.’ There was every indication there was a group of people that didn’t plan to leave,” said Neufeld.

He said flashbangs and tear gas were used as police were being pelted with glass bottles.

“That’s where the escalation was at the end, where there was a small group of people that were throwing things and grabbing on to the police,” he said. “People were throwing projectile­s at the police, refusing to comply with the lawful direction that had been given. Enough was enough.”

Neufeld said five people were arrested and three of them were charged. All were released.

About 150 pro-Palestinia­n supporters returned to the University of Calgary Friday afternoon but there were no tents or barricades.

Many sat in lawn chairs. Others sat on the grass listening to speakers and occasional­ly chanting “Free, Free Palestine.”

A rock, painted in the Palestinia­n colours of black, white and green, included a number of messages including “70,000 kids killed” and “2.2 million starving.”

Canada’s special representa­tive on combating Islamophob­ia said on social media that the Calgary police approach was “jarring.”

“A terrible message is being sent to generation­s of Canadians who were taught to believe in our democracy, in our freedoms, & taught to stand up for what they believe in,” Amira Elghawaby wrote.

The protest was one of several recent demonstrat­ions on academic campuses in Canada and the U.S. in response to Israel’s offensive in Gaza.

Many protesters have demanded institutio­ns make clear if their investment­s are helping fund Israel and its military in its conflict with Gaza. If so, they want those investment­s halted.

In Edmonton, tents were set up on a grassy area of the University of Alberta campus. There were Palestinia­n flags, both cloth versions and hand-painted cardboard ones.

“At the very beginning yesterday, it was one tent and four people. And it has just grown and grown and grown,” said David Kahane, one of the protest organizers.

Kahane, a political science professor at the university, said the protest is about students holding their institutio­n to account in the “slaughter that is happening in the West Bank and Gaza.”

He said students are inspired by time-honoured protest methods. Campus protests and calls for divestment helped end the racist apartheid system in South Africa, he added.

The university has warned protesters that while it respects free speech, they are trespassin­g. Edmonton police say they are prepared to respond to matters of public safety.

 ?? ?? Danielle Smith
Danielle Smith

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