|

UBC President wants the arrest of students for playing hockey
UBC PRESIDENT WANTS THE ARREST OF STUDENTS FOR PLAYING ROAD HOCKEY
STUDENTS VOW TO CONTINUE PLAYING AS A PROTEST AGAINST APEC LEADERS' SUMMIT
VANCOUVER, Wednesday, October 29, 1997 -- University of British Columbia (UBC)
President Martha Piper wants the arrest of students who have been
playing road hockey on the driveway of her official residence as
a protest against APEC (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation). In comments
relayed through a senior campus RCMP officer, she has also threatened
academic discipline against non-violent student protesters. Despite
her hardline stance, students will risk arrest and play hockey today
at 2:30pm (6565 Northwest Marine Drive, Norman Mackenzie House).
For the last three weeks, members of the grassroots student group
called APEC ALERT have been playing road hockey at Norman Mackenzie
House -- the publicly funded official residence of Martha Piper
which is currently unoccupied. APEC ALERT wishes to highlight, in
a fun and non-violent way, the fact that the residence will host
a luncheon of 18 dictators and politicians as part of the APEC Leaders'
Summit on November 25th.
"I think we need to reclaim the space that Martha Piper has given
to people who have murdered students," said Adam Fraser, 25, an
environmental science student at UBC who will risk arrest today
to play hockey.
"I think it's important to maintain UBC as a space for students
and not for dictators and politicians whose policies are clearly
reprehensible," he added.
Last week's hockey game was ended by 7 RCMP and campus security
officers. According to Staff-Sergeant Lloyd Plante of the campus
RCMP, President Piper has instructed RCMP to arrest any and all
students who may return today. (Sergeant Plante can be reached at
(604) 224-1322.)
APEC ALERT members regard the RCMP and President's statements as
a crude attempt at intimidation. According to Gabby Resch, 19, an
international relations student, "I think that it's absolutely preposterous
that the administration is thinking of arresting students who are
not harming people or property."
"Road Hockey Against APEC" is just one component of APEC ALERT's
fall campaign known as "REFUSE APEC." The student group has sponsored
talks, debates, forums, films as well as organized several non-violent
protests, one of which resulted in the arrest of two students in
September, also on the orders of the UBC administration. APEC ALERT
will be sponsoring a campus-wide teach-in on November 24th and a
major mobilization against APEC called "Crash the Summit" on November
25th when protesters will march against the APEC Leaders' Summit
which will take place at the Museum of Anthropology and Martha Piper's
residence.
For more information, please contact APEC ALERT:
-- APEC ALERT --
... grassroots action to oppose APEC at UBC ...
(604) 251-9914 * alert@netinfo.ubc.ca
www.cs.ubc.ca/spider/fuller/apec_alert
****** A-Infos News Service *****
News about and of interest to anarchists
Subscribe - email MAJORDOMO@TAO.CA
with the message SUBSCRIBE A-INFOS
Info - http://www.tao.ca/ainfos/
Reproduce - please include this section
last updated: December 30, 2005
|