The Voice of the University of Toronto at Mississauga
MEDIUM THE
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2008
VOLUME 34, ISSUE 20
www.mediumonline.ca
Human Rights Film Fest reviews
Creative Corner
AFL celebrates 25 in TO
Page 8
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Page 14
Litter piles up in Meeting Place SAIRA MUZAFFAR NEWS EDITOR Caretakers at the University of Toronto Mississauga (UTM) were asked not to clean up after students for a 24-hour period as part of a special initiative to get UTM students to act more ‘green’ when it comes to littering. The university’s Green Team organized this year’s Anti-Litter Campaign that was staged at the Meeting Place in the South Building. Starting at 10 a.m. on Thursday, February 14 and lasting until 10 the next morning, garbage on tabletops and the floor was left untouched to showcase the severity of the littering problem on campus. Green Team organizers kept a visual record of the amount of garbage that accumulated over the course of the day and then worked along with volunteers to clean up at the end.
“This initiative is getting through to students and is the reason why the amount of litter decreased from last years results.” - Milad Mohammadi, Green Team organizer Photo/Melissa Di Pasquale
UTM caretakers are given a break from cleaning up after students at the Meeting Place in the South Building as part of the Anti-Litter Campaign organized by UTM’s Green Team. The mess quickly piled up, leaving students disgusted.
The organizers had originally planned to expand the campaign to include several high-traffic areas on campus such as
Oscar Peterson Hall, but were not able to receive confirmation in time from the administration. “We chose the South Meeting Place because it has the highest concentration of students and it was the site chosen for last year’s Anti-Litter Campaign,” said Green team organizer Milad Mohammadi. The campaign organizers remained on hand during the campaign period to ensure garbage bags and recycling bins were emptied. Regarded as one of the most ‘green’ campuses, UTM ended up surprising Mohammadi and the rest of the Green Team towards the end. According to Mohammadi, the cleanup did not require as many garbage bags as the campaign organizers had come to expect from previous years. “I truly believe that this initiative is getting through to students and is the reason why the amount of litter decreased from last year’s results,” said Mohammadi. The Green Team had posted the campaign on Facebook, giving students a widespread message about taking littering more seriously. “I believe the students are understanding the importance of being green and why initiatives like this are so important to educate individuals about environmental affairs,” said Mohammadi. He also added that the Green Team is considering not to advertise the event in the future to highlight the full scope of the littering problem.
Islamophobia behind Iraq MEREDITH LILLY As part of Xpression Against Oppression Week, University of Toronto Mississauga (UTM) students were treated to a lecture on Islamophobia featuring James Clark of the Toronto Coalition to Stop the War on February 15. The coalition is one of the largest peace organizations in the Greater Toronto Area and represents over 60 labour, student, faith and community groups. Its mandate includes opposing the war and occupation in Iraq, Islamophobia and racism. Clark characterized the “War on Terror” as a “War of Terror,” citing Canada’s indirect support of the United States’ initiatives in Iraq through measures such as providing
armaments. This, he said, should serve as reason for Canadians to rally in protest. Much of the address retold the progression of Canada’s involvement with anti-terror initiatives abroad since the 9/11 attacks in 2001. Clark focused attention on Iraq as opposed to Afghanistan, the site of Canada’s current overseas military efforts, because far more resources have been poured into the Iraq war and there have been more casualties. He estimated that around 1.2 million Iraqis have been killed as a result of the occupation and that 1.5 million died due to the economic sanctions imposed upon Iraq by Canada and the United States. Fatalities in Afghanistan were in the tens of thousands, according to Clark, though no data is available. He also predicted that the next
Canadian federal election will fall on the question of our presence in Afghanistan.
Around 1.2 million Iraqis have been killed as a result of the occupation and that 1.5 million died due to the economic sanctions imposed upon Iraq by Canada and the United States. He believes that much of the support for the “War on Terror” is derived from Islamophobic sentiments in Canada’s popular conscience. Clark pointed to a strain of racist backlash in the media that presupposes
a correlation between terrorism and Islam. He believes that to oppose the war, you must oppose the ideas behind the war. According to Clark, Islamophobia is behind the war. Clark called on students to rally in support of civil liberties. He cited a ew York Times article which discussed the end of United States’ hegemony on the international stage and that the ordinary people of the global peace movement are now a superpower in their own right. In order to build solidarity, he encouraged students to think collectively; to identify first with society so that no one would end being targeted in particular. Clark used the old labour union slogan, “an injury to one is an injury to all,” to exemplify the larger social impact of racist and Islamophobically informed policies.
He lauded the efforts of the Canadian Federation of Students and affiliated unions, who issued anti-war buttons as part of their campaign to encourage world peace. As part of its campaign against war in Iraq, the coalition organizes antiwar rallies that have seen thousands of people come out to support in the past. These rallies have focused around issues such as siege on Fallujah, the Abu Ghraib scandal, and the disappearance of Arab detainees. The coalition plans to hold a peace march on March 15 in Toronto as part of the global World Against War campaign. Friday’s lecture was organized by the University of Toronto Mississauga’s Students’ Union, the University of Toronto’s Students’ Union, Ministry of Social Justice, and Students Against Islamophobia.