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Brown University faces fresh pressure from student activists to divest Israeli firms

A group of Israel-bashing activists are plotting to pressure Brown University into divesting from firms they accuse of being “complicit in human rights abuses” aga♎ins𒉰t Palestinians.

Hard-left student campaigners want the university’s board of 🅰trustees, chaired by Bank of America CE🀅O Brian Moynihan, to cut ties with companies they claim are “profiting from the genocide in Gaza.”

Brian Moynihan, the CEO of Bank of America, was elected chancellor to lead Brown’s board of trustees in February of this year. Bloomberg via Getty Images
Pro-Hamas protests engulfed the Brown University campus for months after the October 7 massacre. AFP via Getty Images

The students want Brown’s $6 billion endowment fund to exit any positions with as many as 10 companies such as Airbus, Volvo and Boeing and end the school’s alleged “c✃omplicity in the oppression of Palestinians.”

They a🀅re also demanding a comprehensive screening procedure ༺for any future investments.

“The question of divestment has brought to the forefront strong and contrasting views, and the vote this fall will bring clarity to an issue of sustained interest to many members of our community,” said Brian Clark, a Brown University spokesperson. “We cannot speculate on the outcome.”

The Post has also reached out to Jane Dietze, Brown’s chief investment officer, who has presided over a 70% increase in the fund’s꧟ꦆ value since she took up her post in 2018.

The Brown Divest Coalition struck a deal with college bosses for a vote to be held this October in return for ending the months of pro-Hamas protests 🐟that eওngulfed the Rhode Island campus.

That agreement angered billionaire real estate mogul Barry Sternlicht who paused donations to his alma mate๊r.

Barry Sternlicht, CEO of Starwood Capital Group, paused donations to Brown, his alma mater, in April after college leadership struck a deal with protesters to end on-campus demonstrations, Bloomberg via Getty Images

“If the vote fails, the students will blame the alumni and other 🎃pressure 🎐on the board,” Sternlicht told Bloomberg. “And if it succeeds, a great injustice will have been made.”

The Starwood Capital Group CEO, whose father fled Poland before the⛄ Holocaust, lambasted Bro༺wn president Christina Paxton for backing down, slamming the protesters as “ignorant.”

“It’s to set a chain reaction,” Arman Deendar, a spokesperson for the Brown𝔉 divestment co🎐alition, told Bloomberg. “Brown divesting, as a highly influential Ivy League private institution, would set a social precedent.”

Rhode Island’s 2016 anti-BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions) laws do not apply♎ to p꧋rivate institutions such as Brown University.

Dietze revealed in an interview for the school’s website that only “4% of the endowment that is directly invested by Brown” with the rest being handled by third party managers such as hedge funds or p🥀rivate equity firms.

The anti-💛Israel protesters have argued that the Ivy League institution should copy its approach from the 1980s to the South African apartheid regime.

Jane Dietze, Brown’s chief investment officer, has presided over a 70% increase in the fund’s value. since her appointment in 2018. Brown University

“Given 🐎today’s realities, it’s not possible to divest the way Brown did in South Africa,” she said.

“In the 1980s, endowments ꦰgenerally owned stocks directly, so if you wanted to sell your shares of, say, Coca-Cola to communicate a desire that Coca-Cola stop doing business in So💎uth Africa, that was a simple process.

“Endowments today overwhelmingly invest through external managers,” Dietze added.

The c🧜omplexity of modern-day endowment investments mean that Brown cannot cash🦋 out of certain funds for a number of years.

The en💟dowments are also a key source of financing for major ﷺcolleges, helping to bankroll university programs or scholarships.

Protests have taken place since the October 7 massacre at other top colleges across America as pro-Palestinian activists try to pressure university leadership into cutting any ties🥀 with Israel.

UPenn president Liz Magill and Havard supremo Claudine Gay were forced to resign after a disastrous testimony to Congress in ✱December after they declined to say whether calling for the genocide of Jews would breach school rules.

Columbia University President Minouche Shafik, a member of Britain’s unelected House of Lords, resigned nearly two weeks ago amid criticism of her handling of campus protests over Israel’s war in Gaza.

Shafik, who cited the𝔍 toll the campus turmoil took on her family, has landed a job a꧒dvising British Foreign Secretary David Lammy on international development.