Arrests
as protesters stage sit-in on Auckland street
Up
to 50 people have been arrested at a protest against changes to
student allowances and loans announced in the Budget.
TVNZ,
1
June, 2012
The
protest is taking place outside Auckland University's library on
Symonds St.
An
eyewitness said students were staging a sit-in, with police
threatening to arrest anyone who refuses to move.
There
are an estimated 80 protesters, with more people watching.
There
is a strong police presence of about 15 officers, plus university
security. They are encircling the protesters on Symonds St to try to
allow buses to get through.
The
protesters are waving flags and chanting slogans voicing opposition
to funding cuts.
Symonds
Street has been closed between Waterloo Quadrant and Wellesley St and
a few bus stops have been temporarily relocated with bus diversions
in place.
Around
400 people turned up to a protest in the same location last week,
blocking one of the busiest streets in the city during rush hour.
The
latest protest has been dubbed "Blockade the Budget Part II:
Protest Like the Greeks," in response to a comment from Finance
Minister Bill English that the protesters "need some Greeks to
show them how to do it".
More
than 1300 people on Facebook said they planned to attend today's
event. The group's Facebook page points to Bill English as a target
of the protest.
"Finance
Minister Bill English has taunted student protesters who are against
the Budget saying 'they need some Greeks to show them how to do it'.
"Let's
make him eat his words."
A
statement from the protesters say that the campaign "is a call
for a stop to the neoliberal attacks on New Zealand's education
sector".
"Education
should be accessible to everyone and be non-discriminatory; it should
never become class based," said the statement.
"Our
current Government views education as a business rather than a
fundamental right of massive social significance.
"Rather
than addressing the issue of debt head-on, the Government is using
education as a scapegoat to further delay its own action in regards
to the growing inequalities in our education system."
The
changes announced in the Budget include increasing the repayment
threshold for student loans from 10% to 12% and only allowing
students to take allowances if they are in their first four years of
study.
The
protesters fear the changes will discourage students from low income
families from doing long degrees or post-graduate study, therefore
restricting occupations in law, medicine or engineering to a
privileged few.
Around
400 "Blockade the Budget" protesters blocked Auckland's
Symonds St last week, one of the busiest streets in the city.
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