
UK universities hold almost $610m worth of investments linked to Israel, data shows
LONDON: UK universities hold almost $610 million worth of investments linked to Israel, research by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign has shown.
The organization submitted freedom of information requests to universities across the UK, discovering financial ties to major Israel-linked companies including BAE Systems, Siemens and Barclays.
Student-led campaigns to divest university investments from Israel have won a series of victories in Britain and continue to gain momentum.
The PSC has led efforts to pressure universities and other institutions into abandoning financial ties to Israel.
It is part of the larger Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement launched among Palestinian civil society in 2005.
The organization received responses from 87 universities following the freedom of information request campaign and has published a database of university ties to Israel through financial investments.
'Direct complicity includes military, security, technological, financial, logistical or infrastructure support,' the PSC said.
'This information adds impetus to the growing divestment campaigns led by students and academics that have won significant concessions from university authorities in the past 18 months.'
The organization found that several universities, including the Essex, Kingston and Warwick, have invested significant funds into companies such as HSBC, Alphabet and Booking.com.
All three companies have faced criticism over their ties to Israel.
Stella Swain, the PSC's youth and student officer, said: 'It's absolutely shameful that any university is investing in companies complicit in genocide. The fact that our universities invest £460 million ($610 million) in these corporations is an outrage.
'But students across the country are taking action to demand an end to this complicity, standing in a proud history of student resistance to occupation, colonization and apartheid.'
The organization singled out four companies with extensive ties to the Israeli military: Caterpillar, which supplies bulldozers to the IDF; BAE Systems, a key partner in the F-35 jet program; Palantir, which provides AI tools to the IDF; and Alphabet, Google's parent company which offers cloud computing services to Israeli forces.
Several universities across the UK have made major concessions to student protesters amid mounting pressure from the BDS movement.
Swansea University in Wales committed to abandoning the £5 million it holds in Barclays Bank, while Cambridge's Trinity College voted last year to divest its sizable investment portfolio from arms companies.
Meanwhile, the University of Portsmouth recently divested an £800,000 investment in Caterpillar following significant student pressure.
'Universities can choose to end their complicity,' Swain said. 'Many have started divestment negotiations as a result of student organizing over the past two years.
'These wins show that we need to keep up the pressure until we achieve divestment at every university.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Al Arabiya
28 minutes ago
- Al Arabiya
At least 35 killed by Israeli strikes in Gaza, many near an aid site, medics say
Israeli military strikes killed at least 35 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip on Wednesday, most of them at an aid site operated by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation in central Gaza, local health officials said. Medical officials at Shifa and Al-Quds Hospitals said at least 25 people were killed as they approached the aid site near the former settlement of Netzarim, and dozens were wounded. Ten other people were killed in other Israeli military strikes in Khan Younis in the south of the enclave, they added. The Israeli military had no immediate comment. On Tuesday, when Gaza health officials said 17 people were killed near another GHF aid site in Rafah in southern Gaza, the army said it fired warning shots to distance 'suspects' who were approaching the troops and posed a threat. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Tuesday there had been 'significant progress' in efforts to secure the release of the remaining hostages in Gaza, but that it was 'too soon' to raise hopes that a deal would be reached. Despite efforts by the United States, Egypt, and Qatar to restore a ceasefire in Gaza, neither Israel nor Hamas has shown willingness to back down on core demands, with each side blaming the other for the failure to reach a deal. Two Hamas sources told Reuters they did not know about any new ceasefire offers. The war erupted after Hamas-led militants took 251 hostages and killed 1,200 people, most of them civilians, in an October 7, 2023, attack, Israel's single deadliest day. Israel's military campaign has since killed nearly 55,000 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to health authorities in Gaza, and flattened much of the coastal enclave.


Asharq Al-Awsat
an hour ago
- Asharq Al-Awsat
Israeli Strikes Kill 35 in Gaza, Many Near an Aid Site, Medics Say
Israeli military strikes killed at least 35 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip on Wednesday, most of them at an aid site operated by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation in central Gaza, local health officials said. Medical officials at Shifa and Al-Quds Hospitals said at least 25 people were killed as they approached the aid site near the former settlement of Netzarim, and dozens were wounded. Ten other people were killed in other Israeli military strikes in Khan Younis in the south of the enclave, they added. The Israeli military had no immediate comment. On Tuesday, when Gaza health officials said 17 people were killed near another GHF aid site in Rafah in southern Gaza, the army said it fired warning shots to distance "suspects" who were approaching the troops and posed a threat. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Tuesday there had been "significant progress" in efforts to secure the release of the remaining hostages in Gaza, but that it was "too soon" to raise hopes that a deal would be reached. Despite efforts by the United States, Egypt, and Qatar to restore a ceasefire in Gaza, neither Israel nor Hamas has shown willingness to back down on core demands, with each side blaming the other for the failure to reach a deal. Two Hamas sources told Reuters they did not know about any new ceasefire offers. The war erupted after Hamas-led fighters took 251 hostages and killed 1,200 people, most of them civilians, in an October 7, 2023, attack, Israel's single deadliest day. Israel's military campaign has since killed nearly 55,000 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to health authorities in Gaza, and flattened much of the coastal enclave.

Al Arabiya
2 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
Rubio condemns sanctions imposed by Britain and allies on Israeli ministers
United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on Tuesday that the US condemns sanctions imposed on two sitting members of the Israeli cabinet by the governments of the United Kingdom, Canada, Norway, New Zealand, and Australia. The countries imposed sanctions on the far-right ministers, Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich, accusing them of repeatedly inciting violence against Palestinians in the West Bank. 'These sanctions do not advance US-led efforts to achieve a ceasefire, bring all hostages home, and end the war,' Rubio said in a post on X. 'The United States urges the reversal of the sanctions and stands shoulder-to-shoulder with Israel.'