Varsity Issue 822

Page 1

Sex work campaigner Tara Burns Vulture

INTERVIEW 8-9

Identity special

Colleges fly the flag for LGBT History Month News 2-3

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Cambridge Pink Week takes off News 6

Features 18-21

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70 No. 822 Friday 3rd February 2017 varsity.co.uk

Championing independent student journalism in Cambridge for 70 years

Vice-Chancellor speaks out as 1,000 protest Sophie Penney Senior News Editor

Cambridge stands up to Trump’s travel ban (PHOTOGRAPH:

LOUIS ASHWORTH)

Cambridge has spoken out against President Donald Trump’s recent travel bans, with approximately one thousand people taking to the streets in protest, and condemning statements issued by key figures in the city and University. Last Friday, in an executive order, Trump issued immediate 90 day travel bans, preventing citizens from seven majority-Muslim countries (Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen) from entering the US. The President also suspended the entire refugee admission system for 120 days and indefinitely suspended the US’s Syrian refugee programme. There has been major national and international backlash against the response of the British government, as Theresa May has failed to openly criticise Trump and has not retracted Trump’s invitation for a state visit to the UK, despite an online petition which has already gained over 1.8 million signatories. On Monday, crowds gathered around Great St Mary’s Church in Cambridge, with strong chanting and several speakers addressing the gathered group, there to protest Trump’s ban and the UK government’s reaction. Protesters held banners with such slogans as “Respect existence or expect resistance”, “Build bridges not walls” and “Theresa the Appeaser, let go of his (tiny) hand”. Chants included “Refugees are here to stay, let’s deport Theresa May”, and “Palestine to Mexico, all the walls have got to go!”. Yesterday the Vice-Chancellor of the University, Sir Leszek Borysiewicz, issued a statement regarding Trump’s actions: “As the head of a university whose staff is actively engaged in research collaborations around the world, I cannot accept a policy that undermines academic freedom, disrupts partnerships, and blocks the pathways to understanding between peoples, faiths and nations.” He added, “This ban is fundamentally at odds with the values of openness, tolerance and evidence-based decisionmaking that the University of Cambridge stands for.” He said that the ban may “curtail some of our researchers’ ability to attend academic events, work with colleagues,” Continued on page 4 ▶


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