A
group of eight university students have taken critical step to take
their grievances home after they stripped totally n*ked to protest.
In
a sh*cking show, eight students have staged a n*ked protest after it
was revealed the University of Melbourne would continue to invest in the
fossil fuel industry.
According to Dailymail, the
students climbed onto the roof of the Old Quad building at 10am on
Tuesday and stripped off their clothes to reveal the message ‘drop your assets’ painted onto their bare backs and b*ttocks.
The
protest is aimed against the university’s administration decision to
continue to invest in the fossil fuel industry. In a meeting conducted
last Thursday between Fossil Free MU members and Chief Financial Officer
Alan Tait, Mr Tait reiterated the university’s stance that they would
not be committing to divestment.
Rapid divestment from fossil fuels is a crucial step on the pathway to a safe climate future,’ said Professor John Wiseman, Deputy Director of the Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute.
‘Divestment
from fossil fuels is therefore an urgent ethical and financial
responsibility for all Australian investors and institutions – including
universities.’
‘We’ve had to be courageous and we’re showing the University everything we’ve got,’ said Master of Environment student Anastasia Gramatakos.
‘It’s now their turn to show us what they’ve got – to show some courage and take action against the fossil fuel industry.’
They
remained on the building’s roof for 10 minutes before security asked
them to leave. The student group Fossil Free MU launched the fossil fuel
divestment campaign in June 2013.
In
three years of campaigning, the students have held referendums,
rallies, and forums to engage students, staff and the university council
to promote divestment.
The current campaign is part of
a national fossil fuel divestment effort that is taking place at seven
universities across the country, including the Australian National
University, The University of New South Wales, the University of
Queensland, the Queensland University of Technology, The University of
Sydney, and Monash University.
Two
universities, the University of Sydney and the Australian National
University, have already made partial divestment commitments, and
Swinburne University is in the process of seeking an investment fund
that can provide a fossil free portfolio.

0 comments:
Post a Comment