NUS votes to support a free Palestine

December 18, 2023
Issue 
Protest in Meanjin/Brisbane on December 17. Photo: Alex Bainbridge

The National Union of Students (NUS) unanimously voted to stand in solidarity with Palestine at its 2023 National Conference.

One hundred and fifty-six delegates, representing 23 university campuses across Australia, supported a bloc of five motions on December 12.

These include publishing a statement about Palestine, freeing Layan Kayed and all Palestinian political prisoners, condemning the Israeli government鈥檚 destruction of human rights and standing against Islamophobia.聽

The NUS has since posted a confirming their public support, with a particular emphasis on resisting the 鈥渟econd Nakba鈥 currently taking place in Gaza.

Mover Cherish Kuehlmann from Socialist Alternative at the University of NSW told Honi about why she supported the bloc of motions: 鈥淲e鈥檝e seen indiscriminate bombing of hospitals, schools, UN centres. There is a siege and blockade on essential medication, food and water 鈥斅燝aza has been turned to rubble.鈥

Speaking about the power of NUS, Kuehlmann said: 鈥淪tudent unions need to take a stand against genocide, apartheid and oppression. That鈥檚 why I moved this motion.鈥

University of Sydney鈥檚 2023 Education Officer Ishbel Dunsmore, who worked within Grassroots to ensure the bloc of motions was supported by Unity and National Labor Students, said that achieving a free Palestine 鈥渞equires heeding the call from Palestinian trade unionists to internationally mobilise [unionists] to end all forms of complicity with Israel鈥檚 crimes, most urgently to end the arming of Israel鈥.

A Palestinian activist at the conference noted that NUS鈥 鈥渟upport of an immediate ceasefire in Palestine, the release of Palestinian political prisoners, support for the BDS movement, including a designation that NUS is now an Apartheid-Free Zone, condemning Islamophobia and anti-Arab racism, and calling for a National Day of Action for Palestine鈥 is 鈥渁 historic moment鈥.

In particular, they said it shows 鈥渢here is a growing divergence between Labor and Labor Youth on the topic of Palestine鈥.聽

A member of the anti-Zionist, anti-colonial Tzedek Collective also present at the conference commented that 鈥渁s a Jewish descendent of Holocaust survivors鈥, it was 鈥渁n honour and a mitzvah to be a part of writing one of these motions that commits the NUS to making Australian university campuses apartheid free zones.鈥澛

He added that this historic motion 鈥渁lso commits the NUS to recognise that Zionism is not the same thing as Judaism, and thus critiquing Zionism of its violent nature is not antisemitic.鈥

Western Australian Independent students Melanie and Amira spoke to Honi about how their bloc of motions in support of Palestine failed to gain unanimous support from the NUS.

They said Unity had told them 鈥渢hey had a problem with the phrase 鈥榝rom the river to the sea鈥 and the term 鈥榞enocide鈥欌 in motions 2.7 and 11.14.

As well as being 鈥渂asic and descriptive terms to explain what is happening in Palestine鈥, Melanie and Amira also pointed out that the term 鈥済enocide鈥 features in Unity鈥檚 motion in the Ethnocultural chapter.

Member of Students For Palestine Jasmine Al-Rawi echoed these sentiments, stating that it 鈥渋s a really good step that the NUS has adopted a pro-Palestine position鈥, but that it 鈥渋s also important to continue fighting and actually put these motions into action鈥.

For more coverage of NatCon 2023, see Honi Soit鈥檚 live updates on Instagram and X.聽

[This article was first published at . Simone Maddison is a member of USYD Grassroots.]

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