Students for Justice in Palestine at VU University in Amsterdam stepped up their campaign for an academic boycott of Israel last week.

Two students dressed as Israeli soldiers “raided” the university accompanied by fellow activists who handed out leaflets about Israel’s occupation and others abuses of Palestinians.

The “soldiers” summoned students to show their IDs to check if they were Palestinian and inspected bags and “suspicious” objects.

The action aimed to increase the support for an academic boycott of Israel.

SRP, as the group is known by its Dutch initials, posted a video of the action on its Facebook page. The video, above, also explains the reasons the group is pushing for a boycott of Israeli institutions.

“Students and staff responded positively to our action,” SRP chair Thomas Hofland told The Electronic Intifada. “Many were not aware that military inspections are a daily routine for Palestinians in the West Bank and the refugee camps,” he added.

VU University, a large publicly funded research institution, has links with Tel Aviv University through an exchange program. It has also officially received the dean of Haifa University, together with the Israeli ambassador.

Banned

SRP objected to the visit because of Haifa University’s ties with the Israeli military. Such ties “normalize the occupation of Palestine and the Israeli apartheid regime,” the SRP video states.

The students are calling for an academic boycott because all Israeli universities cooperate closely with the government and the military. PACBI — the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel — has established guidelines for such a boycott.

The student group had planned a public meeting on the topic at VU University in early 2015. But the university board banned the event at the last minute, revoking an earlier permission. The board claimed that the “civil unrest” created by the attacks on the French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo had evoked “feelings of exclusion and insecurity” around the meeting.

The role of Dutch pro-Israel lobby group CIDI in creating the “unrest” became clear, however, when it publicly thanked its supporters for their efforts to have the SRP event banned. The public meeting was transferred to a venue outside VU University.

SRP was also moved to protest when, despite a university promise not to promote an annual CIDI event, a series of lectures about Israel’s foreign policy organized by CIDI was announced on the university’s internal website. The information was subsequently removed.

SRP will organize events at VU University and in Amsterdam during this year’s Israeli Apartheid Week.