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No. 886 Friday 29th January 2021 varsity.co.uk
Cambridge’s Independent Student Newspaper since 1947
Cambridge commemorates ifth anniversary of Giulio Regeni’s murder Cameron White Senior News Editor Georgia Goble News Correspondent Content note: his article contains a brief mention of torture he Cambridge community has this week commemorated Giulio Regeni following the ifth anniversary of his murder in Egypt. In a statement from the University, Giulio is remembered as an “outwardlooking scholar, brimming with intelligence, curiosity and compassion” who showed “commitment to human rights, to his parents and wider family.” A virtual vigil was held for Regeni over Zoom on Sunday night (24/01), organised by Amnesty International Cambridge City Group (AICCG) and Cambridge UCU, and featuring statements from Vicky Blake, National President of the University and College Union (UCU), Daniel Zeichner, Labour MP for Cambridge, and Debora Singer, Amnesty International’s Country Coordinator for Egypt. Regeni was a doctoral student at Girton College who moved to Cairo in September 2015 to conduct research for a thesis on the Egyptian economy
and independent trade unions in the country. he University’s commemorative statement was released by ViceChancellor Professor Stephen Toope on Monday (25/01), describing Regeni’s death as a “tragedy” and an “unbearable blow to his family and friends”. “It horriied his university colleagues in Cambridge, Cairo, and across the global academic community. It was also an assault on the principle of academic freedom that underpins the work of all universities, and which Giulio embodied”, the statement continues. he statement, which has so far received over 700 signatures from students and staf alike (as of 26/01), emphasises the ongoing need to “defend the principle of academic freedom”. It states that “the liberty to pursue independent research is a cornerstone of global scholarship” and that academics “should never be at risk of harm for following their intellectual curiosity, for collecting original data, or for seeking evidence to verify or challenge ideas.” he statement adds that the signatories are “deeply troubled” by an “increasingly overt pattern” of “inFull story on page 2 ▶
▲ Vigils have been held to commemorate Regeni since his murder in 2016 (ALISDARE HICKSON/WIKIMEDIA COMMONS)
USS retains investment in fossil fuels Luke Hallam Deputy News Editor he Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS) retains substantial investments in oil and gas companies, despite a signiicant fall in the value of fossil fuel stocks
as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic. At the start of 2020, the USS had direct investments in fossil fuels worth over £1 billion. he scheme provides pensions for over 450,000 members working in higher education across the country, including
at the University of Cambridge. According to information available on the USS website, the scheme had investments worth £86.35 million in Royal Dutch Shell Ltd. and £106.71 million in India-based Reliance Industries as of 30th September 2020.
Only igures for the USS’ top 100 public investments are publicly available. In February 2020, there were a total of nine oil and gas companies in the list of top 100 investments. Shell and Reliance are the only companies that have not since dropped out of the list.
According to igures seen by Varsity, in February 2020 the investments in Shell were worth £498 million. Investments in oil and gas companies which have since fallen out of the top 100 include Continued on page 3 ▶
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