As university campuses around France shut down in the face of pro-Palestinian protests, administrators at the prestigious Sciences Po university in Paris refused to accede to demands to end partnerships with Israeli institutions. The higher education minister has asked university presidents to quell protests using all means at their disposal.
At a two-hour “town hall” debate held at Sciences Po in Paris on Thursday, administrators refused to consider ending its partnerships with Israeli companies or universities, as demanded by protest leaders.
The celebrated university has become the epicentre of pro-Palestinian student protests in France, which have spread around the country.
Its campus in Lille was closed on Thursday, while access to the northern city’s ESJ journalism school was limited.
'Difficult' debate
The interim director of Sciences Po, Jean Bassères, told reporters that the university’s debate – attended by more than 300 people, including students, professors and employees – was “difficult”, with “strong positions taken and lots of emotions”.
The town hall was one of the conditions students set for calling off their occupation of the Paris campus last week.
Bassères said the university put forward its “intransigence on anti-Semitism and the fight against separatism”.
Saying he preferred to “prioritise dialogue with the students”, he acknowledged that refusing their demand for a working group to rethink the school’s links to Israeli partners could anger some protesters.
“I'm calling on all to show a sense of responsibility,” he said, urging protesters not to disrupt exams set to start next week.
The dean of Science Po's school of international affairs, Arancha Gonzalez, said the partnerships with universities should be “the last bridges to cut off”, and that the university already has rules to review partnerships.
Protests continue
The protest movement will continue at all 74 of Sciences Po’s campuses around France, the spokesperson for the school’s student union, Eléonore Schmitt, told France Info.
Students at universities across Paris plan to hold meetings Thursday evening to decide on the future of the movement, with a call for a mass gathering at the Panthéon monument on Friday afternoon.
Earlier Thursday, Minister for Higher Education Sylvie Retailleau met with university presidents and urged them to maintain public order using the “broadest and most complete powers” at their disposal, according to the AFP news agency.
The ministry said the meeting was intended as a reminder that “universities are the bastion of democracy and of supervised debate, which is neutral and cannot be manipulated”.
(with newswires)