Amazing, Amazing to hear this.
Carleton is the second university in the world, after The Evergreen State College, to have a student body-wide resolution for divestment pass by a landslide!
We at TESC Divest! are excited to welcome Carleton to the growing club of campuses whose student body are saying NO! to subsidizing occupation and apartheid!
From
Students Against Israeli Apartheid - Carleton:
Grad Students Vote to Divest from Israeli Occupation
On
March 21st and 22nd, graduate students at Carleton University
overwhelmingly voiced their support for the Palestinian people, by
voting for the university’s pension fund to divest from four companies
that are complicit in the occupation of Palestine. With the vote taking
place through a referendum question, all graduate students had the power
to make their voices heard, and in the end, over 72% took a principled
stance, by voting for Carleton to stand on the side of justice,
equality, and accountability.
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The referendum question asked students to support Carleton adopting a
binding Socially Responsible Investment policy that would require the
university to divest from companies complicit in illegal military
occupations and other violations of international law, including, but
not limited to: BAE Systems, Motorola, Northrop-Grumman, and Tesco
Supermarkets. These companies are directly engaged in the subjugation of
the indigenous peoples of Palestine, complicit in an illegal military
occupation and an apartheid system that operates contrary to the letter
and spirit of international law.
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In 2008, Students Against Israeli Apartheid (SAIA), the group that
spearheaded the referendum campaign, was formed at Carleton University.
SAIA came together in response to the July 2005 Palestinian civil
society call for boycott, divestment, and sanctions against Israel until
it complies with international law and recognizes the indigenous
Palestinian people's inalienable right to self determination.
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The idea of international human rights was a Western-liberal project
launched following the atrocities of World War II; the advancement and
defense of it has historically been contingent on social and political
movements, particularly the anti-colonial and anti-apartheid struggles
that liberated millions from dire and oppressive conditions in the
twentieth century. Where nation states have stood by, idle, mute, and
therefore complicit, civil society has stepped into the void, and has
spoken strongly in favour of the
oppressed.
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Now, graduate students at Carleton have voted yes to divestment, and
in through this referendum victory – which needs to be formally ratified
by the Graduate Student Association council in April – they have said
no to lending their tuition and image, as an academic body, to the
normalization of military occupation, further entrenched via abhorrent
systematic discrimination and other violations of international law.
This marks the first time in the world that a referendum question on
divestment has passed on a university campus, and it is one of many
results of nearly four years of intensive campaigning by SAIA. The
graduate students' will to divest adds further strength to SAIA's
growing divestment campaign, which consists of 2500+ petition
signatories and the endorsements of over 25 student clubs, academic
workers’ unions, and university service centres in an expanding student
movement across campus.
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Although Carleton's administration has shown little interest in
divesting from the aforementioned companies or in adopting a binding
mechanism to prevent unethical investments in companies that violate
international law, students have spoken out and grad students have voted
explicitly in favor of divestment.
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A university is an academic institution comprised of a student body;
its financial structure is rooted in enrollment and tuition fees. As
such, this administration is accountable to the student body, and we do
not support profiting at the blatant expense of human rights.
In 1988, the Carleton Anti-Apartheid Action Group forced the
university to divest from South African apartheid. We did not stand for
South Africa's apartheid system back then; we will not stand for
Israel's now. We salute Carleton’s grad students for once again standing
on the rights side of history!
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The Electronic Intifada notes:
Students Against Israeli Apartheid (SAIA) at Carleton University hailed the result as a major milestone for their campaign in a statement posted online:
it is one of many results of nearly four years of intensive
campaigning by SAIA. The graduate students’ will to divest adds further
strength to SAIA’s growing divestment campaign, which consists of 2500+
petition signatories and the endorsements of over 25 student clubs,
academic workers’ unions, and university service centres in an expanding
student movement across campus.
The statement also said it was a world first however that distinction
belongs to Evergreen State College, whose students passed divestment
resolutions in a June 2010 referendum. Nonetheless, the Carleton vote is almost certainly the first such result in Canada.
The statement noted that SAIA was formed in 2008 in response to the
Palestinian civil society call for boycott, divestment, and sanctions
against Israel. SAIA is working to get the Carleton University
administration to divest the institution’s pension funds from firms
complicit in Israeli occupation and human rights abuses.
The Carleton vote is a another milestone in divestment activist in Canada. In February the University of Regina Student Union passed a resolution supporting divestment
.. . .
A video released by Carleton SAIA
campaigning for divestment explains that an ethical divestment policy
will be beneficial not only for Palestinians, but to oppose other human
rights abuses around the world.
However, the SAIA statement, noted:
Although Carleton’s administration has shown little interest in
divesting from the aforementioned companies or in adopting a binding
mechanism to prevent unethical investments in companies that violate
international law, students have spoken out and grad students have voted
explicitly in favor of divestment.
In 1988, according to the statement, “the Carleton Anti-Apartheid
Action Group forced the university to divest from South African
apartheid.”
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