The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Cops on campus

Why police crackdowns on student protesters are so dangerous

- ROBERTA LEXIER THE CONVERSATI­ON Roberta Lexier is an associate professor in the Department­s of General Education and Humanities at Mount Royal University in Calgary.

The recent violent crackdowns on pro-palestinia­n encampment­s on campuses across the United States have reignited a long debate about the role of law enforcemen­t on university grounds.

For those north of the border — despite similar encampment­s cropping up in recent days at Mcgill University in Montréal — they may have also reinforced a familiar sense of superiorit­y about our supposedly peaceful nation.

But make no mistake — since at least the 1960s, authoritie­s across Canada have used police to silence peaceful student protests.

Take Simon Fraser University, for example. By 1968, the so-called radical campus was accustomed to upheaval. But when approximat­ely 200 students occupied the university’s administra­tion building that year — purportedl­y to demand equitable admissions processes, though some activists hoped to spark a direct confrontat­ion with campus officials — university president Ken Strand called the RCMP.

In the middle of a November night, 114 students were handcuffed, arrested and escorted down Burnaby Mountain.

Hugh Johnston, a historian at Simon Fraser, described the scene in his book Radical Campus: Making Simon Fraser University:

“Over 100 unarmed police officers were on the scene; and they achieved surprise by blocking the road to the university while Vice-president [George] Suart cut off both pay phones and regular phones in the occupied building. The students inside did not resist and were taken out the back door one at a time — with a police officer on either arm — and through a 50-man police corridor to a succession of [police vehicles] pulling up one behind the other… A crowd from a dance in the cafeteria had formed behind the library where the [vehicles] were lining up, and linking arms, they began singing ‘We Shall Overcome.’”

POLICE ESCALATION

This was not the first time police helped suppress nonviolent demonstrat­ions in Canada.

The 1919 Winnipeg General Strike ended when police officers attacked a crowd that had overturned a streetcar. On so-called Bloody Saturday, two protesters were killed, 34 wounded and 94 arrested.

It was a similar scene during the Regina Riot in 1935 that left one dead, 45 wounded and 130 arrested.

Even after the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms was enshrined in 1982, guaranteei­ng the rights to peaceful assembly and free expression for all citizens, protesters risk detention or worse. Some examples include Indigenous land defenders and those protesting the G20 summit in Toronto in 2010.

For generation­s, however, universiti­es remained separate from the broader community. Drawing on the principle of in loco parentis — in which colleges act as guardians to their students — institutio­ns had their own rules, disciplina­ry structures and punishment­s.

Local law enforcemen­t largely had no jurisdicti­on and no authority on campuses. Their presence historical­ly caused tension, even riots.

In 1964, for instance, students at the University of California, Berkeley, launched a nationwide movement opposing police interferen­ce at the university.

This period of unrest marked a change in the relationsh­ip between universiti­es and off-campus authoritie­s after the Second World War.

CHARGES, PRISON SENTENCES

Dealing with an influx of anti-authoritar­ian baby boomers, university administra­tors lost interest in maintainin­g their parental responsibi­lities. Students were to be treated as mature, responsibl­e adults.

After occupying the administra­tive building in 1968, more than 100 Simon Fraser students faced charges of “mischief against private property” and the possibilit­y of two to 14 years in prison. Ultimately, 104 pleaded guilty to “disturbanc­e,” receiving $250 fines, and one was sentenced to three months in prison.

At Montréal’s Sir George Williams University — now Concordia — 97 students were arrested for their role in a 1969 occupation protesting racist policies and practices.

As participan­t Rodney John recalled: “Some were given prison sentences of two weeks to three years. Bail set ranged from $1,500 to $15,000.” For marginaliz­ed students from the Caribbean, such penalties proved catastroph­ic.

John explained 50 years later: “The cost to the students — not only the ones arrested — is never mentioned, much less calculated.”

Penalties were similarly severe for the 49 students arrested during protests against the Asia-pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (APEC) meetings at UBC in 1997; the Trent Eight, who were detained in 2001 after occupying a college about to be closed; and the 2,000-plus students arrested during the 2012 tuition protests in Québec.

No campus protests in Canada have fuelled the type of state violence playing out on American campuses now as students protest Israel’s bombardmen­t of Gaza or in May 1970, when the Ohio National Guard shot and killed four student anti-vietnam War protesters at Kent State University.

Nonetheles­s, the consequenc­es of police interventi­ons can be severe. Fines, lost employment opportunit­ies, criminal charges and other repercussi­ons can trail students for the rest of their lives.

The increased militariza­tion of police since 9-11 also dramatical­ly raises the risk of violence and injury, as demonstrat­ed in 2011 at the Occupy Wall Street protests and currently during the student encampment protests in the U.S.

At Mcgill, for now, there has been no police involvemen­t. The university says it’s contemplat­ing its next steps.

DISTRACTIN­G FROM BIGGER ISSUES

Police crackdowns can spark additional demonstrat­ions, as they did in the weeks following the Kent State shooting. What’s more, while violating the fundamenta­l human rights and academic freedom of students, they can also distract from the issues at hand: in the case of the ongoing crackdowns in the U.S., that’s the horrific plight of the Palestinia­n people.

Even if you disagree with their concerns or their tactics, students should not be penalized for thinking critically about world events and trying to bring about positive social change.

This is exactly what they are supposed to do, and why there’s been a push over the past 50 years to devalue and defund humanities and social sciences programs.

If we are serious about solving global problems and creating a more equitable world, then university administra­tors, politician­s and other stakeholde­rs must stop using law enforcemen­t to prevent students from asking inconvenie­nt questions. The costs are simply too high.

 ?? MIKE BLAKE ■ REUTERS ?? Law enforcemen­t officers detain a protester at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), during a pro-palestinia­n protest, as the conflict between Israel and the Palestinia­n Islamist group Hamas continues, in Los Angeles, Calif., on Thursday.
MIKE BLAKE ■ REUTERS Law enforcemen­t officers detain a protester at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), during a pro-palestinia­n protest, as the conflict between Israel and the Palestinia­n Islamist group Hamas continues, in Los Angeles, Calif., on Thursday.
 ?? MIKE BLAKE ■ REUTERS ?? A law enforcemen­t officer holds a weapon as protesters supporting Palestinia­ns in Gaza gather at an encampment at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) on Thursday.
MIKE BLAKE ■ REUTERS A law enforcemen­t officer holds a weapon as protesters supporting Palestinia­ns in Gaza gather at an encampment at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) on Thursday.

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