University granted four-month protest injunction
The University of Cambridge has been granted a High Court order blocking Israel-Palestine protests on parts of its campus until the end of July.
Last month, a judge dismissed a request by the university for a five-year injunction blocking direct action related to the conflict on several sites without the university's consent.
On Wednesday the university returned to the High Court to apply for a four-month order preventing protesters from disrupting multiple graduation events.
Mr Justice Soole granted the injunction on Friday, stating there was an "imminent and real risk of a recurrence" of direct action on the campus and a "strong probability that this will otherwise occur" if the order was not issued.
"I am satisfied that there is a compelling need for the granting of an injunction," he said.
He added the "proposed terms are the minimum necessary in the circumstances" and the injunction "does provide a fair balance between the rights of all parties".
The injunction prevents protesters from disrupting graduation events up to 26 July, the final ceremony of the academic year.
Myriam Stacey KC, for the university, told the hearing protesters seemed to be mostly affiliated with the group Cambridge for Palestine.
A spokesperson for the university said it welcomed the High Court's decision and it would "safeguard" its site from occupation and therefore the graduation ceremonies, while protecting the right for staff to work.
They added the action "was never about preventing lawful protest".
The European Legal Support Center (ELSC) opposed the university's bid, with its lawyers telling the court the injunction was a "disproportionate infringement" on the human rights of the protesters and would set a "dangerous precedent" for protesting on campuses.
Cambridge for Palestine said it "condemns" the decision, which it described as "a violent move to criminalise and police our movement".
Follow Cambridgeshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.
University seeks four-month protest injunction
Protesters barred from disrupting degree ceremony
University condemns Palestine Action paint protest
Students occupy building in Gaza war protest
Students occupy building in Gaza war protest
Hashtags

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


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
Israel intercepts Gaza-bound aid ship, detaining Greta Thunberg and other prominent activists
Israel has intercepted a Gaza-bound aid ship carrying Greta Thunberg and other prominent activists, detaining those onboard, according to the Freedom Flotilla Coalition (FFC), with Israel's foreign ministry saying activists have been taken to Israel


News24
an hour ago
- News24
Israel makes Greta Thunberg and activists watch Hamas massacre videos
Israeli forces intercepted an aid boat headed for Gaza. Activists aboard the boat were detained. They were made to watch videos of the Hamas atrocities on 7 October 2023. Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz congratulated the country's military for intercepting the flotilla which was set to deliver aid to Gaza. 'I congratulate the IDF for the swift and safe takeover of the Madeleine (sic) flotilla in order to prevent them from breaking through the blockade and reaching the shores of Gaza,' Katz wrote in Hebrew on X. AFP reported that activists, including Greta Thunberg, departed Italy aboard the Madleen on 1 June to bring awareness to food shortages in Gaza, which the UN has referred to as the 'hungriest place on Earth', with the entire population at risk of famine. The Israeli government had directed its forces to stop the 'celebrities yacht' from reaching Gaza. Katz said the activists were forced to watch a video of the Hamas attacks on 7 October 2023 before they would be deported. 'I instructed the IDF to show the passengers of the flotilla a video of the horrors of the October 7 massacre when they arrive at the Port of Ashdod. The antisemitic Greta and her fellow Hamas supporters should see exactly who the Hamas terror organisation they came to support and for which they are working and what atrocities they committed against women, the elderly and children, and against whom Israel is fighting to defend it.' READ | Israel blocks 'selfie yacht' with Greta Thunberg from reaching Gaza with aid In a statement, the coalition said the Israeli military intercepted the Madleen at around 03:02 CET (01:02 GMT) just off the coast of Gaza. Israel is facing mounting international pressure to allow more aid into Gaza, after a more than two-month total blockade led to widespread shortages of food and basic supplies. אני מברך את צה"ל על ההשתלטות המהירה והבטוחה על משט "מדלן" כדי למנוע מהם לפרוץ את הסגר ולהגיע לחופי עזה. הנחיתי את צה"ל להקרין בפני נוסעי המשט את סרטון הזוועות של טבח ה-7 באוקטובר כאשר יגיעו לנמל אשדוד. ראוי שגרטה האנטישמית וחבריה תומכי החמאס יראו בדיוק מיהו ארגון הטרור חמאס… — ישראל כ'ץ Israel Katz (@Israel_katz) June 9, 2025 Dozens of people have been killed near Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) distribution points since late May, according to Gaza's civil defence agency. It said Israeli attacks killed at least 10 people on Sunday, including five civilians hit by gunfire near an aid distribution centre. Civil defence spokesperson Mahmud Bassal and witnesses said the civilians had been heading to a site west of Rafah in southern Gaza, run by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. 'The IDF will continue its war against the murderers of Hamas with all its moral righteousness until it surrenders, releases all the abductees, and ensures the security of the State of Israel,' said Katz. Hamas attacked Israel on 7 October 2023 resulting the in the deaths of 1 218 people, mostly civilians, and the Israeli offensive in retaliation has killed at least 53 977 people in Gaza, mostly civilians, according to data from the Hamas-run health ministry, which is considered reliable by the UN.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
The LA riots could destroy Donald Trump's presidency
We're only a few days into the anti-riot crackdowns in Los Angeles by various armed government enforcers and already there are lives at stake. No, not the lives of the hundreds of protestors out on the streets across America's second-largest city, but the political lives – or at least longevity – of some of the highest-profile personalities to emerge during president Trump's second turn in the White House. There's Los Angeles mayor, Karen Bass, already weakened by her disastrous performance during last year's wildfire chaos and now even more compromised by the optics of incompetence as her city erupts yet again. And, of course, California governor Gavin Newsom, whose unbridled presidential ambitions could take a fatal hit if his state does not return to law and order – and fast. The riots are a test for Kristi Noem, the US secretary of Homeland Security, aka 'ICE Barbie' – who made waves when she toured a Salvadoran mega prison in March sporting a $50,000 Rolex. Her hardline anti-migrant stance has made her a close Trump confidant – but can it stand up to the ire of the masses she helped mobilise by her often cruel migrant deportation sprees? But the most consequential political life at stake here is that of Donald Trump himself – whose ultra-adversarial, bully-like tactics have yet to be tested as they are right now in California. There has never been anything quite like the anti-ICE protests during either of Trump's terms. The Women's Marches and BLM protests of his first administration may have, at times, turned rowdy and chaotic – but their violence was never directed at the White House like it is right now. This moment is different. Very different. For one thing, the conflict in Los Angeles is a direct response to Trump's hardline policies – in this case the illegal migrant crackdown – and are being mounted by those personally impacted, rather than virtue-signalling college kids motivated by 'privilege guilt.' The riots also come after 18 months of anti-Israel protests that have been some of the most violent protests in modern US history. America's radical Left has not only perfected aggressive adversarialism since Hamas' October 7 attacks – it's normalised it. And now it has even further weaponised this disregard for civility on what could be a far larger scale. Back in 2020, the National Guard were deployed to merely help support local law enforcement efforts when the BLM riots turned critical, and the Left was practically apoplectic. This time, the National Guard are Trump's main characters – and the Marines could be the White House's next course of action. This is a level of pushback practically without precedent – risky and uncertain amid an atmosphere of anti-Trumpism whose long-anticipated #resistance has finally materialised. Now unleashed, the California protesters could prove the ultimate – and most unanticipated – foils to a Trump White House whose run of nearly unchallenged luck looks like it is coming to an end. For many illegal migrants facing deportation, the spectre of arrest or even death rivals the potential violence awaiting in their home nations. These are people with literally nothing to lose – and thanks to Joe Biden there are millions of them existing along America's fringes. These are not the college-educated agitators who fuelled BLM in 2020 and 'Save Gaza' more recently – with middle class families and aspirational futures at stake. Fuelled by governor Newsom's surprising anti-Trump resolve – on Sunday he dared Trump's henchmen to arrest him – the protests could very well continue deep into the week, or even weeks; arrests, injuries or even deaths be damned. Trump has staked his legacy and the future of Maga on an uncompromising commitment to his ideals – and an end to illegal migration has been at the top since he branded Mexicans as 'rapists' on the very first day of his very first campaign a decade ago. Now those Mexicans are brandishing their nation's flag as they finally seek retribution. The past weekend's violence was practically inevitable – even if no one clearly saw it coming. With America already up in flames over Gaza – and the left always salivating at the prospect of an even more spectacular intersectional cause célèbre – the mayhem could easily spread beyond California in the coming days. The #resistance has finally arrived and it's far bloodier than anyone could have anticipated. It may still be early in Trump 2.0, but the Los Angeles riots could easily emerge as its most defining moment. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.