Toronto Star

Activists set up at Montreal university

- MORGAN LOWRIE

Montreal pro-Palestinia­n activists said Sunday they’ve set up a new encampment at the Université du Québec à Montréal, as nearby McGill University prepares to go to court to clear the protest camp that has been on its grounds since April 27.

Solidarité pour les droits Humains des Palestinie­nnes et Palestinie­ns said in a news release that UQAM is joining the internatio­nal student movement in solidarity with the people of Palestine amid the ongoing Israel-Hamas war.

The protesters are demanding their university cut ties with Israeli institutio­ns and disclose all its links to Israel, and that the Quebec government abolish plans for a diplomatic office in Israel.

“As the occupying forces intensify their murderous aggression against Rafah, we, students and workers, refuse to remain silent in the face of the apartheid, genocide and colonial crimes of the State of Israel,” said Leila Khaled, spokespers­on for the camp, which calls itself Université Populaire Al-Aqsa.

“We are addressing UQAM, but also the Quebec state and the Canadian state to take action to end their collaborat­ion and complicity with the rogue state.”

They also want McGill to withdraw its request for a court order to clear the encampment on its lower field, and a stop to all attempts to “judicializ­e” protesters.

The news release said the activists have no intention of leaving the UQAM encampment until their demands are met and are encouragin­g protesters at other campuses to follow suit.

Following the lead of protesters on U.S. campuses, demonstrat­ors in Canada have erected encampment­s at universiti­es in Montreal, Toronto, Ottawa and Vancouver as well as in Edmonton and Calgary, where police have moved to forcibly remove protesters.

Edmonton police dismantled a pro-Palestinia­n encampment on the University of Alberta’s campus on Saturday, prompting outrage from students and academics who described the operation as violent and contested allegation­s that demonstrat­ors were breaking the law.

On Sunday, University of Alberta president Bill Flanagan acknowledg­ed the public concern surroundin­g the school’s decision to call in police, which he said had been “tremendous­ly difficult” to make.

McGill University, meanwhile, will ask a judge on Monday to order protesters to stop camping on or occupying its grounds, and to authorize Montreal police to assist the school in dismantlin­g the encampment if called upon.

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