Pro-Palestinian encampment at McGill enters 5th day as court decision looms

Article content

The pro-Palestinian encampment at McGill University enters its fifth day on Wednesday against the backdrop of a looming court decision on whether it should be dismantled.

The exterior portion of the encampment, outside the fenced-in tents where people have been sleeping, grew from Tuesday to Wednesday.

Article content

Protesters have now installed wooden pallets over the muddy lawn and erected several sun shelters, extending the protest’s presence on campus.

Article content

“We’re not leaving here until our demands are met,” Concordia University student Zeyad Abisaab had said on Tuesday afternoon. “This is an indefinite encampment.”

McGill University has already said it has requested police assistance in handling the encampment, arguing the protest goes against school policy and the law. A single police car kept watch on the site early Wednesday morning.

Meanwhile, a lawyer representing two McGill students was in court Tuesday requesting an order to have the encampment dismantled and a ban on protests within 100 metres of any of the school’s buildings.

A judge is expected to rule on the request Wednesday.

A tent city fenced in with tarps. There are pallets over the muddy ground.
A pallet bridge crosses a drainage ditch between rows of tents as the sun rises over a pro-Palestinian encampment on Engineer’s Field at McGill University May 1, 2024. Photo by Allen McInnis /Montreal Gazette

The protest is meant to bring together students from different Montreal universities in demanding their schools cut ties with Israeli institutions and companies in response to Israel’s offensive in Gaza.

The offensive was a response to the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas in Israel, in which more than 1,200 Israelis and foreigners were killed. More than 34,000 Palestinians have been killed in the war, according to the Hamas-run Health Ministry.

While McGill has said it’s seen evidence of instances of antisemitism at the encampment, the students involved have repeatedly rejected the allegation and note there are several Jewish groups involved in the protest.

Students began setting up the encampment on Saturday, on the lower part of McGill’s downtown campus. It has steadily grown since and now counts roughly 75 tents in addition to the canopies and tarps surrounding it.

The Montreal police have acknowledged the force has received McGill’s request for assistance, but say they are considering the approach to take.

“We are evaluating the various possible avenues and advocating for a peaceful outcome,” a police spokesperson said Tuesday.

This story will be updated.

Jacob Serebrin of The Gazette contributed to this report.

jfeith@postmedia.com

Recommended from Editorial

  1. Protesters inside the McGill encampment arrive with new wood for flooring, as they try to expand their area on the evening of Tuesday April 30, 2024.

    Pro-Palestinian encampment vows to stay after McGill asks police to step in

  2. Lawyer Neil Oberman arrives at the Montreal courthouse to file an injunction requesting the dismantling of the the pro-Palestinian encampment on McGill's campus on April 30, 2024.

    Court to rule on dismantlement of McGill encampment

  3. Protesters are asking McGill to sell any holdings in its stock portfolio they say are linked to companies whose activities can be linked to Israel's conflicts with Palestinians or are profiting from the war. The encampment on McGill's campus is seen on April 29, 2024.

    Protesters demand McGill divest in companies linked to Israel. What does that mean?

Share this article in your social network

Source