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Take back your campus.

Defend Birmingham | 15.02.2012 17:26 | Education | Public sector cuts | Repression | Birmingham

Today we staged a sit-in at the University of Birmingham for the following reasons:

In defiance of the unprecedented injunction banning stationary protests this sit-in took place, stopping access to the main conference centre rooms and disrupting meetings that continue to perpetuate the university as a corporate business rather than an educational institution. We fundamentally disagree with the university’s continual business agenda, which keeps Eastwood on a disproportionately high pay while members of staff face real-term pay cuts and students fees have tripled.

We condemn the actions taken by the university against the freedom to protest on campus. This we believe to be a right, that students and indeed all people should be able to freely express their discontent. The university should be a bastion for free-speech. As it stands, the university does not recognise this human right and actively seeks to curtail it. The University of Birmingham now finds itself condemned by Amnesty International for its repressive conduct.

We condemn the disciplinary action taken against Simon Furse. Simon’s disciplinary is an example of the extreme victimisation that this university will deploy in order to crush its student body. Simon was singled out against a backdrop of nationwide occupations of which no other student has been disciplined for; only Simon is being disciplined despite the fifty or so other students also involved. The university is trying to make an example of Simon by attempting to punish him they are trying to intimidate other students. This behaviour is a Draconian response to an otherwise peaceful protest. This is an affront to democracy and puts the University of Birmingham to shame, so much so that David Eastwood has been condemned by the national press from the Guardian to the Daily Mail.

We will continue to take action until the university stops repressing the student voice.

Defend Birmingham
- Homepage: https://brumoccupation.wordpress.com/2012/02/15/take-back-your-campus/


Comments

Hide the following 3 comments

Legal point

15.02.2012 20:14

Do the students own it?
Because, if they don't, it really isn't your university.
It is the university you attend upon acceptance of your enrolment.

For instance, I attend a job at my workplace - but I don't own the workplace. The shareholders do. No matter how i want my workplace to be, ultimately I don't own it so it isn't up to me.

I imagine universities are the same. Possible a charitable trust, where the trustees effectively run it by appointment. So, it is the charity who own it, and they put the trustees in charge. The students don't come into it.




Dave


You are not representative

16.02.2012 10:07

Please do not assert your minority viewpoint and campaign as being representative of our student body here at Birmingham. Your tactic of continuously seeking confrontation with those who administer the university is causing problems for those of us who solve problems by talking and consensus decision making.

The Corporate Conference Centre is recognized by those of us who are overseas students as helping to offset the costs of our education and frankly if a few executive types want to spend a day talking to each other and that keeps my costs down then I welcome it.

I question your motivation and targets of this campaign, you are certainly not helping the students.

Student here


Bigger picture

16.02.2012 14:51

Your needs as a student are not our focus. We are fighting to protect the future of education in this country. I doubt you are the sort of person that understands how the future of your children is at risk.


Defend Birmingham
- Homepage: https://brumoccupation.wordpress.com/2012/02/15/take-back-your-campus/


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