George Fox 6: Campus Activism at the Crossroads
GF6 supporters | 21.09.2005 23:00 | Anti-militarism | Education | Social Struggles
On Monday 26th September, the trial of the George Fox 6 commences at Lancaster Magistrates Court. Six student activists face charges in a three day trial arising out of an action that took place at Lancaster University in September 2004 where protestors had gone into the George Fox building at the university to hand out leaflets and talk to people at the "Corporate Venturing" Conference - a networking meeting for multinational corporations. Speakers at the conference were drawn from controversial arms manufacturer BAE Systems, Shell and other companies the six say have 'long histories of human rights abuses and environmental destruction'. Police attended and told the protestors they were doing nothing wrong, but some months later they received summonses through the post. The defendants are seeking support at the trial.
[ GF6 Support Group | Action at corporate conference | Call for support | Interview with defendant during trial lunch break - 1.2Mb ]
As Universities are forced to rely on external funding to a greater and greater extent, the face of the Academy is changing. Increasingly decisions are made by faceless bureaucrats, and traditional values such as 'academic freedom' are eroded by business plans and links with multi-national corporations, who expect returns for their investments. Campus activists are increasingly being subjected to harsh disciplinary measures, and the trial of the George Fox 6 has worrying implications for campus activism in the future. If the students are convicted, then we can expect to see Lancaster University's actions mirrorerd elsewhere. Students who object to the corporate raids on their campuses can expect to see themselves facing harsh measures, including criminal prosecutions.
...a trial - a charge against those who share and nurture knowledge that the old men do not like
In 1660, George Fox, founder of the Quakers, was imprisoned in Lancaster for refusing to swear allegiance to the king. The world has changed in the last 350 years, and these days the worst thing that could happen to you if you refused to swear allegiance to the queen is refusal of UK citizenship for immigrants, or the boot from the local Brownie pack.
Lancaster University, founded in 1964, and according to it's own website "one of Britain's top universities. The Times Good University Guide 2004 said Lancaster was "among the top dozen universities for research and in the top 20 for teaching".
In 1974, new colleges were opened at the Uni, which operates an Oxford style collegiate system. One of them was Pendle, named after the region associated with the 17th century witch trials of 1612, where 10 accused were sentenced to death after a three day trial in which they refused counsel or the right to call witnesses.
There is some irony in the fact that a University which, in the recent past, chose to identify buildings and colleges with miscarriages of justice, is now actively involved in the suppression of academic freedom and an attempt to criminalise dissent against corporations such as BAe Systems and the nefarious Carlyle Group. Their actions are yet another indication of the growing intolerance of dissent in a society which sees growing corporatisation of all spheres, including the academy.
"Disrupting lawful activity"
The students have been charged with the 'offence' of aggravated trespass, a charge which has been used against animal rights activists and anti-corporate protestors on numerous occasions since the Anti-Social Behaviour Bill made the offence, which was first used against squatters on outdoor land, applicable to events which take place inside buildings.
Charges were dropped against activists who entered the Iraq Procurement Conference in April 2004, after they sought to use the trial to highlight the illegality of an occupation force selling off Iraqi assets. When a group occupied the offices of the conference organisers, the CPS substituted a different charge.
Protestors operating under the smashEDO banner in direct actions against Brighton "weapons interface" manufacturers EDO MBM have also been prosecuted for the offence in two separate trials, where despite one group being found not guilty, the defendants were subsequently named in an application for an injunction against harrassment brought by the company which exhibits at DSEi
It is perverse that students risk being criminalized for leafleting conferences where companies that are widely known to be involved in a activities such as corrupt dealings with military dictatorships, climate change and human rights violations and cronyism and nepotism were in attendance, whilst the corporate criminals cry that they are intimidated, and the state pretends that what those corporations do is lawful.
That the University pretends that students are tresspassers on their own campus is astounding to many!
The corporatisation of the Academy
That the Academy is hurrying to join the state in prosecuting those who take a stand against the very impersonal transnational corporations that rob, rape and pillage our planet should come as a surprise to no one. Neo-liberal policies have effectively ensured that the impoverished academy is more likely to side with its corporate sponsors, who pump in larger amounts of capital than individual fee paying students, undermining academic freedom in the process. Individual students, the majority of whom will leave university up to the eyeballs in debt, are pressured to pursue the agendas that the corporations dictate, at the expense of student solidarity. Thus there appears to be no mention of the travails of the George Fox 6 on the University Student Union site leaving many applicants to the University unaware that they are about to join a University that has little respect for academic freedom or dissent.
Interventions by groups such as Liberty, local councillors, Lancaster Quakers and the National Students Union have fallen on deaf ears. An online petition has had no effect on the Vice-Chancellor, and a letter writing campaign has elicited standard replies which suggest that the letters are not even being read. NeoLiberal nuLabour minister Ruth Kelly, in her first speech on Higher Education, urged other Vice Chancellors to follow suit.
As a theatre critic at a Lancaster University production of 1984 noted:
" But in this case, I was also painfully aware, on this occasion, that 1984 was being played – by students, at Lancaster University - at just the same time as six of these students’ peers were being hauled through the courts on politically-motivated charges at the behest of the faceless bureaucrats and the global capitalists."
George Fox must be turning in his grave...
Links
[ Call for support | Corporate Venturing conference | Video of protest (divx 2mins long) ]
Campus activism elsewhere
[ Uni Teachers & Students Demonstrate Over Pay and Fees | Inspection teams move in on Birmingham University | Glasgow Uni persecutes anarchists ]
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