Non-students in pro-Palestinian camps ‘likely to have extended protests'
The presence of 'external individuals' in pro-Palestinian encampments on university campuses is likely to have helped the protests last longer, a report has suggested.
Universities could not take disciplinary action against individuals who joined campus encampments – which took place across the UK in spring and summer last year – if they were not students or staff, according to the Higher Education Policy Institute (Hepi) paper.
The camps made many Jewish students 'fearful' for their safety and the protests may have encouraged students to engage in antisemitic behaviour, the think tank's report said.
The Office for Students (OfS), England's higher education regulator, 'missed an opportunity' to help institutions, and the Government put them in an 'awkward position' over the topic, it found.
The paper – which is based on interviews with student protesters, senior university leaders, students' union officers and Jewish students – concluded: 'It is very likely that the involvement of external individuals helped encampments continue for longer and campaign more energetically.
'They provided supplies and food, occupied tents overnight so students could return to their accommodation and participated in activities.
'They also boosted morale by giving students the energising sense they were having a positive impact.'
Some students said members of the local community also helped by 'adding numbers to encampment-organised protests'.
Students who took part in the protests were motivated by 'feelings of anger and powerlessness' about the war in Gaza and they felt genocide was being 'live-streamed' to their phones via social media, the report said.
It added: 'Students used social media to build support for the cause by making a seemingly distant conflict seem personal for students and staff.
'The most widely shared posts attacked institutions and senior staff directly for their alleged complicity in genocide or mistreatment of protesters.'
But the report – which looked at the encampment protests at 36 universities across the UK last academic year – suggested that students were also motivated to join due to 'wider grievances'.
It said: 'They felt that institutions were not taking seriously their concerns around Islamophobia, tuition fees, staff pay and pensions, mental health or the freedom to protest.'
The paper said there was a consensus that the OfS 'failed to help institutions deal with contested free speech like the 'river to the sea' chant'.
It added that some members of encampments engaged in antisemitic behaviour – including writing antisemitic slogans in Arabic.
'The presence of encampments may also have emboldened other students not involved in the protests to engage in antisemitic behaviour,' the report suggested.
If similar protests take place again, the think tank called on universities to take steps to prevent external individuals from joining encampments, and they should establish robust communication with Jewish students and staff.
Josh Freeman, policy manager at Hepi and author of the report, said: 'Now a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas has been signed, it is a good time for universities to reflect on this fraught period of student activism.
'Most protests last only a few hours and disappear as quickly as they appear. The encampments were very different.
'From April 2024, they became a semi-permanent feature on many campuses. This allowed the protesters to build a visible, sustained campaign to pressure institutions to take action.'
He added: 'The visibility brought its own challenges. Many students and staff were uncomfortable to have to walk past the protests every day.
'Institutions should learn the lessons of the protests. Supporting the free speech of protesters and others was and should be a key priority.
'Another important consideration is supporting student wellbeing, and more should have been done to support vulnerable members of the academic community, including Jewish students and staff and the protesters themselves.'
Researchers carried out interviews with 14 student protesters, 19 university staff, eight students' union officers, 10 Jewish students and representatives, three other representatives of the Jewish community and two others.
Vivienne Stern, chief executive of Universities UK (UUK), said: 'This report illustrates the challenges universities face in balancing their duty to protect and promote free speech, and to allow legitimate protest, with the obligation to ensure the safety of their campuses and the ability of staff and students to go about their work and study.
'They are also obliged by law to prevent hate speech, antisemitism and racism.
'There is much that we can learn from this balanced reflection of the perspectives of many of those who have been involved in the protests over the past year.'
Arif Ahmed, director for freedom of speech and academic freedom at the OfS, said: 'Universities and colleges need to take steps to uphold free speech within the law for students, staff and visiting speakers. This includes making provision for peaceful protest.'
He added: 'We're clear that lawful speech does not, and cannot, include discrimination against, or harassment of, Jewish students or staff – or any other conduct prohibited by law.
'In other examples, speech may be offensive or shocking to some but its legality may be highly dependent on the particular facts of the case.
'That is why the OfS cannot offer blanket guidance on, for example, the lawfulness of certain phrases.'
Stella Swain, youth and students campaigns officer at the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC), said: 'Students set up encampments because they are rightly horrified at the fact that their institutions have links with Israel's genocidal assault on the Palestinian people in Gaza.'
She added: 'Universities must listen to their students and ensure they stand on the right side of history by breaking all ties of complicity with Israel's ongoing violence, its illegal occupation, and its violations of the rights of the Palestinian people across their homeland.'
A Department for Education spokesperson said: 'We welcome this report and encourage institutions to reflect on what can be learned regarding handling protests appropriately and effectively.
'Everyone is entitled to their political opinions and has the right to campaign on issues, but any action must be conducted lawfully.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Palestinians say local gunmen and Israeli forces opened fire near Gaza aid site
Palestinians in Gaza say they were fired on once again as they headed to one of the aid distribution centres run by the Israeli- and US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation on Monday. Witnesses said that for the first time they were fired on by Palestinian gunmen near the GHF site in the Tal al-Sultan area of Rafah, in the south. They also said Israeli troops fired on them. Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry said six people were killed and 99 injured from areas designated for aid collection. The Israeli military said it was looking into the reports. The GHF said the Tal al-Sultan site did not open on Monday and that there were no incidents at two other sites which did hand out aid. It comes days after Israel's prime minister acknowledged that it was arming Palestinian clans in Gaza who were opposed to Hamas. Gaza-bound activist boat carrying Greta Thunberg towed to Israel Gaza health workers say four killed by Israeli gunfire near aid centre Netanyahu confirms Israel arming clans opposed to Hamas in Gaza Almost every day since the GHF began distributing aid on 26 May, there have been deadly incidents near one or other of the four centres it has so far opened. Dozens of Palestinians have been killed while approaching one site in the Tal al-Sultan area of Rafah on a route that runs through an Israeli military zone. In the previous incidents, witnesses have said that Israeli forces opened fire at crowds. The Israeli military has denied that troops fired at civilians within the site, but it has said that troops fired at "suspects" who ignored warning shots and approached them. In Monday's incident, people at the scene said that Palestinian gunmen shot at them, as well as Israeli forces. They said the gunmen appeared to be allied with the Israeli forces, as they were operating near them and moved back into an Israeli military zone. One witness told BBC Arabic's Middle East daily programme that he saw a group of young men dressed in civilian clothes and with their faces completely covered when he arrived in the area to get a box of food aid from the GHF site. "At first, we thought they might be Palestinian youths helping with the process, but suddenly, they began shooting at us," Hisham Saeed Salem said. "Even those who managed to get a box of aid were targeted and shot. We still don't know who these attackers are. They took everything from us - some even stole from us during the chaos," he added. Another man, Mohammed Sakout, said: "Several young men were shot and killed right behind me. I narrowly escaped death - some bullets passed just inches from my head." "At first, it was the Israeli army that was shooting at civilians. But today, we were shocked to discover the presence of gangs and militias," he added. At Nasser hospital in the nearby city of Khan Younis, a seriously injured man being treated for a gunshot wound to his neck, Mohammed Kabaga, told the Associated Press: "A group of masked armed men who were organising us starting firing towards us directly." "We went to get aid. They said to stand in line. We stood in line and suddenly they started shooting at us. While I was standing, I was surprised when a bullet hit me, I got dizzy and fell down," he said. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) told the BBC that it was looking into the reports. The GHF said in a statement that it opened two sites on Monday in the Saudi neighbourhood of Rafah and Wadi Gaza, in the centre of the Strip, and that "aid distribution at both sites proceeded without incident". When asked by the BBC about the reports from Tal al-Sultan, a GHF spokesperson said there was "nothing around our sites". However, a post on the group's Facebook account did say on Monday afternoon that the Tal al-Sultan centre was closed due to the "chaos of the crowds". The GHF's interim executive director, John Acree, said it had delivered more than 11 million meals over the past two weeks "without an injury or major incident at our distribution sites". Gaza's health ministry said hospitals had received a total of 127 dead and 1,287 injured people from "areas designated for aid distribution" during the same period. The GHF, which uses US private security contractors, aims to bypass the UN as the main supplier of aid to Palestinians. The UN and other aid groups refuse to co-operate with the new system, saying it contravenes the humanitarian principles of neutrality, impartiality, and independence. They also warn that Gaza's 2.1 million population faces catastrophic levels of hunger after an almost three-month total Israeli blockade that was partially eased three weeks ago. The US and Israel say the GHF's system will prevent aid being stolen by Hamas, which the group denies doing. The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza in response to the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage. At least 54,927 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory's health ministry.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Clergy join protesters to keep the peace after weekend's destruction
Priests, rabbis and other religious leaders took to the streets of Los Angeles on Monday to help keep the peace amid protests that spiraled into violence over the weekend. The protests against President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown intensified with the deployment of National Guard members, something local and state officials said has worsened, not improved, the situation. Additionally, hundreds of U.S. Marines are reportedly on the way to L.A. Waymo cars were torched, businesses were ransacked and numerous injuries were reported over the weekend's chaos. On Monday, however, protests were much more peaceful, and religious leaders — some of them partnered with the organization Clergy and Laity United for Economic Justice — made a point to discourage violence by both police and protesters at the intersection of Alameda and Aliso streets in downtown Los Angeles. 'We're here to peacefully ask where the families are,' the Rev. Omega Burckhardt told KTLA's Kimberly Cheng. '¿Donde están los niños? Where are the people who've been detained? We're also here peacefully to support the right to protest, and we're here to help keep a peaceful presence for folks. We understand people are very angry and very upset, and we're here to provide a non-anxious presence.' Another religious leader directly spoke with police following what appeared to be one person's frustrations with officers. 'I was saying, 'Nobody needs to get shot today, nobody needs to get harmed today,'' the Rev. Eddie Anderson told Cheng. 'We can stand here and do our First Amendment right and nonviolently protest them ripping apart our families and taking away our loved ones. This is Black-brown solidarity and all religious faiths coming together. This is our Los Angeles and everyone deserves to be free in this city.' Police and Anderson appeared to come to a common understanding, as an officer thanked the minister for his assistance in keeping that agitated crowd member from trying to break through officers, while the minister thanked police for protecting protesters as part of their duties. 'We're not going to shoot anyone,' the officer affirmed. Anderson's colleagues added that their religious beliefs require them to stand up for immigrants and others targeted by the Trump administration. Rabbi Susan Goldberg said she was defending 'the deepest values of the Jewish community,' including 'compassion,' 'love' and 'care and support for the most vulnerable.' 'It's the most-repeated command inside our Torah to take care of the widow, the orphan and the stranger, and to treat them as family and to take care of them,' she said. Another clergy member, the Rev. Stephen 'Cue' Jn-Marie, continued to make a faith-based case for the protest, calling it 'a moral obligation' to stand against the immoral crackdown. 'In Scripture and in my faith tradition, it says the two greatest commandments are to love the Lord your God with all your heart and to love your neighbor as yourself,' he said. 'They can't be separated; you have to do them together … In order to love God, I have to love you first, because you're created in the image of God in my faith tradition.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Israel responds as Greta Thunberg's flotilla reaches Gaza
On a boat organized by the Freedom Flotilla Coalition, an alliance of several pro-Palestinian groups — including one designated as a terrorist group in Israel — the self-described 'autistic climate justice activist' Greta Thunberg and others were detained by the Israel Defense Forces on Monday during their attempt to reach Gaza amid an active war. The civilian ship, the Madleen, was looking to enter the waters along Gaza during the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas when Thunberg said they were 'kidnapped' by Israeli forces while attempting to deliver 'baby formula, medical supplies, and other life-saving aid' to the people of Gaza. Thunberg and 11 other activists, including Rima Hassa, a French member of the European Parliament who was barred from entering Israel in February for previous statements she's made against the country, and Brazilian activist Thiago Avila, who attended the funeral of Hassan Nasrallah, the former secretary-general of Hezbollah and is seen in a video chanting 'Allahu Akbar! Death to America! Death to Israel! Victory to Islam!' The Madleen was intercepted at around 3 a.m. local time on Monday, and photos of the encounter appear to paint a different picture than that presented by Thunberg. In a press release from the Federal Flotilla Coalition the crew was described as having been 'attacked/forcibly intercepted by the Israeli military' and said the IDF 'unlawfully boarded, its unarmed civilian crew abducted, and its life-saving cargo—including baby formula, food and medical supplies—confiscated.' Footage posted by the Israeli Foreign Ministry shows the soldiers passing out water bottles and sandwiches to the activists. They dubbed the Madleen a 'selfie yacht,' because of the passengers' premeditated videos saying they were kidnapped, even though they knew they were unlikely to get past the Israeli forces. Videos also show climate activist Thunberg and everyone else on the boat throwing their cellphones into the ocean after someone yelled to 'ditch the phone!' In Gaza, tens of thousands of Palestinians have reportedly been killed, although the number of civilians versus combatants is unclear. Many thousands more Palestinians have been displaced in the ongoing conflict. The Israeli Navy told the passengers of the Madleen that all humanitarian goods must be delivered through established channels, and that they would deliver the humanitarian cargo to Gazans. 'The tiny amount of aid that wasn't consumed by the 'celebrities' will be transferred to Gaza through real humanitarian channels,' the Israel Foreign Ministry reposted on X, noting that 'More than 1,200 aid trucks have entered Gaza from Israel within the past two weeks, and close to 11 million meals were transferred by the GHF directly to civilians in Gaza.' 'There are ways to deliver aid to the Gaza Strip — they do not involve provocations and selfies." Though much of social media's reaction seems to be critical of Thunberg and her activist comrades, some condemn the Israeli response, calling their actions a 'photo-op.' 'Israel makes a photo-op out of offering international hostages food and water after kidnapping them for trying to bring food and water to starving Palestinians in Gaza,' a post by Aaron Maté, a writer for the anti-Israel publication The Grayzone, said. The Israeli Foreign Ministry also said early on Monday that the pro-Palestinian activists would be returned to their countries. But first, Defense Minister Israel Katz ordered that they be shown a video of the attacks against Israelis on Oct. 7, 2023. During questions on Monday, President Donald Trump was asked if he had discussed Thunberg during his phone call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday morning. 'Well, (Thunberg is) a strange person,' he said. 'She's a young, angry person. I don't know if it's real anger; it's hard to believe, actually. But I saw what happened. She's certainly different. Anger management. I think she has to go to an angry management class. That's my primary recommendation for her.' He was also asked about Thunberg's assertion that Israeli forces kidnapped her. 'I think Israel has enough problems without kidnapping Greta Thunberg,' Trump said.