Extract from The Guardian
Academic staff furious at honour for former prime
minister, saying it ‘flew in the face’ of the University of
Sydney’s values
The former prime minister John Howard: ‘To
confer a doctorate on him is an insult to Indigenous people, refugees
and anyone committed to multiculturalism, peace and social progress.’
Photograph: Dean Lewins/AAP
Wednesday 28 September 2016 14.53 AEST
Academic staff are protesting the University of
Sydney’s decision to award John
Howard an honorary doctorate labelling it is “deeply scandalous
and inappropriate”.
The former prime minister will receive the
doctorate at a graduation ceremony on Friday as an acknowledgment of
his achievements including “world-leading gun law reform,
leadership in East Timor and contribution to Australia’s economic
reform”.
A letter of protest has more than 100 signatures
of staff and PHD students demanding an alternative graduation
ceremony be put on for students who will have theirs “effectively
ruined” by the honouring of Howard. Staff are also threatening to
boycott the ceremony and protest outside instead.
“To confer a doctorate on him is an insult to
Indigenous people, refugees, and anyone committed to
multiculturalism, peace and social progress in this country and in
the world,” the letter says and cites the Iraq war as a major
reason for the protest.
Howard responded: “It is a free country – they
are entitled to their view”.
Howard is an alumni of the University of Sydney
which has also conferred honorary doctorates on former prime
ministers Robert Menzies, Gough Whitlam, Stanley Bruce and William
Hughes.
One of the organisers of the protest, a senior
lecturer in English and linguistics, Nick Reimer, said they were yet
to get a response from the university and the honorary doctorate
“flew in the face” of the values of the institution.
“Howard’s period in office exemplified the
kind of prejudice and disregard for the social good which entirely
goes against the mission of an institution like a university,” he
said.
“... The idea that the university would honour
him is deeply scandalous and inappropriate.”
Reimer said it was politicising the university to
also allow Howard to give a speech at the graduation ceremony.
“It’s true that Howard was elected but part of
the role of the university is precisely to constitute a kind of
counter power and to call government and politicians to account, and
the kind of craven courting of politicians, the opportunistic
courting that university senior management regularly do throws all
ethical, moral and intellectual standards to the wind,” he said.
A university spokeswoman said its senate had
approved Howard’s conferral last December and Bob Hawke would
receive an honorary doctorate later in the year. She acknowledged the university was aware of the
protest but did not directly address it.
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