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UK Universities Paid Private Firm to Spy on Pro-Palestine Students and Academics

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At least 12 UK universities have allegedly secretly paid a private intelligence firm to monitor students and academics reports Aljazeera, including those expressing support for Palestine, in what campaigners say is a chilling crackdown on political dissent.

The firm, Horus Security Consultancy, was hired to carry out surveillance-style operations on campuses. Its work is saif to include monitoring social media accounts, gathering intelligence on individuals and assessing perceived “threats” linked to student protests.

The investigation claims the company trawled through students’ online activity, effectively building profiles on those involved in activism.

Pro-Palestine protesters were among those specifically targeted, with demonstrations across UK campuses increasingly framed through a security lens rather than as legitimate political expression.

In one case, the firm is said to haev carried out background checks on a Palestinian guest speaker invited to a university, raising serious concerns about racial profiling and the policing of who is allowed to speak.

Hundreds of Thousands Spent on Surveillance

Universities collectively paid at least £440,000 to the firm since 2022, funnelling public money into monitoring their own students.

Horus presents itself as an intelligence-led consultancy, staffed by individuals with backgrounds in military and security services, further blurring the line between education and state-style surveillance.

Counter-Terror Tactics Used on Peaceful Protest

The firm reportedly conducted “counter-terrorism” style risk assessments on campus activism.

Critics say this represents a dangerous escalation, where peaceful protest is increasingly treated as a security issue.

Civil liberties groups warn that such practices risk criminalising dissent, intimidating students and creating a chilling effect on free speech, particularly for those speaking out on Palestine.

Universities Accused of Siding with Power

The allegations come amid evidence that universities have been working closely with corporate and political interests to monitor student activism.

Previous disclosures suggested some institutions offered to track student protests in response to pressure from arms companies concerned about demonstrations.

Campaigners say this exposes a wider pattern of universities prioritising reputational and financial interests over students’ rights.

Growing Backlash Over Surveillance Culture

Trade unions and rights groups have condemned the use of private intelligence firms on campus, warning that universities are drifting towards a culture of surveillance and control.

They argue institutions should be defending free speech and protecting students, not secretly monitoring them.

The revelations are expected to intensify scrutiny on universities and reignite the debate over free speech, protest rights and institutional complicity in suppressing dissent.

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To whom it may concern, Queen Mary University of London does not use the services described in this piece. Our inclusion in this article is inaccurate. We have repeatedly asked that you remove Queen Mary, as we have not used these services, and you have not responded. You are spreading misinformation. We ask that you immediately remove Queen Mary from your article and all related posts on other platforms. We also ask that you publish a correction within the article. We note that Queen Mary is not mentioned in the source article for this piece and your own Fact Check states that our inclusion is unverified.
bobchristianmedia
Exeter have said this is catagorically untrue to suggest the university of Exeter used the services described, and threatened legal action when i asked about it