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Cambridge students occupy!

jono | 25.10.2006 02:05 | Education | Cambridge

Students at the University of Cambridge have staged an occupation and demanded that University Vice-Chancellor Alison
Richard stop lobbying for an even higher university tuition fee. They have been in occupation of the Sedgewick lecture block since 6pm. At 10 pm they were threatened with academic discipline by Chief provost Dr. Frank King, who asked them to leave. They refused and have hunkered down for the night.

Teach-in
Teach-in

The Senior Provost and his entourage arrive
The Senior Provost and his entourage arrive

The administration threatens academic discipline
The administration threatens academic discipline


Discussion on what to do
Discussion on what to do



They decide to stay
They decide to stay



The Autonomous Study Project screens a film (Can dialectics break bricks)
The Autonomous Study Project screens a film (Can dialectics break bricks)


As the occupation kicked off, Cambridge Education Not for Sale issued the following statement:

On the occupation of Sidgwick lecture site in protest at top-up fees

Alison Richard: stop calling for higher fees!
Tax the rich to fund free education!
For a living grant for all!

Cambridge Education Not for Sale are occupying a lecture theatre from
6pm on October 24 to demand the University Vice-Chancellor Alison
Richard stops lobbying for an even higher university tuition fee.

With students already faced with a £3,000 a year bill for tuition, VCs
are demanding huge increases when the cap is reviewed in 2009, with
elite institutions like Cambridge seeking permission to charge up to
£10,000 a year.

The financial situation for many students is already dire; many work
long hours at low-paid jobs to fund their education, with a heavy
impact on academic work. The introduction of the £3,000 top-up fee
this year was a massive blow to education in Britain, making it
impossible for countless young working-class people to enter Higher
Education and effectively deterring thousands more. The 3.7% drop in
applications represents over 15,000 students, equivalent to the whole
of Coventry University disappearing!

Raising the cap on fees will only increase the elitist nature of our
education system. Education is a right, not a privilege for those
whose parents can afford it; it should be a properly-funded, high
quality public service, available to all.

ENS believes that there is only one way to fund a genuinely free and
fair education system - taxation of the rich and business,
redistributing resources from profits and luxury to the education and
other services people need. This is the only demand that can cut
through the government's lying claim that there is not enough money
for public services.

We want to unite students and workers, particularly lecturers and
other campus workers, in defence of public education and against the
privatisation which is affecting education as it is other public
services. We stand against the privatisation and outsourcing of campus
services and in solidarity with all university workers campaigning to
defend and improve their rights.

We welcome the anti-fees action by the National Union of Students and
call on student activists to mobilise for the national demonstration
in London on October 29.

At the same time, we do not think that one demonstration a year will
be enough to stop top-up fees, let alone begin to reverse
marketisation and win the kind of education system students need.
We're calling on activists to take direct action against top-up fees
on their campus. If you are based in or near Cambridge, please come
and join our teach-in at Lecture Room 1, Sidgwick Site.

Cambridge Education Not For Sale

Pictures of the occupation and visit by the Senior Provost and his team are below. Higher resolution images (and more of them) are avialable. For commercial use, please email cambridge[at]lists.riseup.net for permission to reprint.

jono
- e-mail: cambridge@lists.riseup.net
- Homepage: http://www.cambridgeaction.net

Comments

Hide the following 7 comments

pictures

25.10.2006 13:55

any chance you could resize the pics?

rasputin


privatisation and repression

25.10.2006 17:46

Nice one!! I send my cambridge peeps greetings and solidarity from rainy londontown. Maybe a bit of direct action will wake people up to the dismantling of the idea of education as a right for all which is currently taking place.

I would also add that in addition to deterring students from entering university in the first place, student debt also has the effect of preparing students for life in an economy governed increasingly by neoliberal policies. By forcing students in to debt, many students are encouraged to enter high paid jobs for investmenet banks and corporations. In other words, student debt is beneficial to the private sector.

I think the issue also needs to be understood in a wider and more global context. In Colombia for example, where I met many student activists last year, the privatisation of public universities was accompanied by severe repression of student activism and dissent. The notion of the university as a forum for critical ideas was being attacked by the state, and universities which catered for the needs of business and for the children of the rich were being proposed as the alternative. Obviously the situation is not as dire here in the UK, but we need to bear in mind the wider implications of underminging public funded education.

Keep it up!

natty dred


Solidarity and kisses

25.10.2006 20:50

Great to start the new year with some direct action. It is time we start some ruckus all over the UK over the laughable state of our education and the subsumption of higher education into the wider capitalist system.

We're moving up to the demo on the 29th for starters, but actions will soon follow down here in 'sunny' Brighton.

Strength, solidarity and kisses,
Alex from Sussex Uni.

Alex
mail e-mail: adarcar@riseup.net
- Homepage: http://www.autonomists.net


Solidarity from Bradford

25.10.2006 22:34

Well done guys, hope you're all still there and having a good time. Uni staff really aren't used to student occuptions anymore-ours didn't have the faintest idea what to do with us when we occupied the admin area of our uni in solidarity with the lecturers strike.

See you all on Sunday in London.

Bradford Student


In an envious state of awe..

26.10.2006 11:19

Fantastic work guys, nice one. Its great to see an example of student activism actually been taken seriously. Together we can make things happen. I'm with you in spirit.

Fern


That'll teach emrouble

26.10.2006 12:46

There's trouble in the lecture rooms - lets put our silly hats on and try to frighten the students - that will show them we mean business!

Quelch


nice to hear this

26.10.2006 16:43

It is really nice to hear that students in England are standing up for the right of public education.
We are students from latinamerica that have been fighting since birth again the imperialist opression on our countries. Public health and education are rights that have been taken from us not only by the neolibealism goverments but also by the ones that stand for "progresive" but still rule under the imperialims dictates.
Our history and present fights have shown us that workers and students must be united.
We salute you all!!! and please keep us informed by this media. We will be following closely with the most ansiously fraternity.

Someone