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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsRMIT Withdraws Misconduct Charges in High-Profile Gaza Protest Case
In a significant development for Australian higher education, RMIT University has withdrawn misconduct charges against fine arts student Gemma Seymour, who publicly accused the institution of complicity in genocide through its defence research partnerships. The decision, announced on April 10, 2026, came just days before a scheduled student conduct hearing on April 22, marking what activists are calling a victory for free speech on campus.
Seymour's case stemmed from a video posted on the RMIT Students for Palestine Instagram account in August 2025. Standing in a corridor near the Sir Lawrence Wackett Defence and Aerospace Centre, she declared, "No more excuses RMIT. There is blood on your hands and we will not rest until you cut ties with all weapons companies." The accompanying caption called for the centre's shutdown, labeling the university "complicit in genocide."
RMIT initially argued the video breached student conduct policies by revealing the centre's unpublished location, posing risks to safety and security. An anonymous external complaint triggered the investigation, highlighting tensions between student activism and institutional security protocols.
The withdrawal followed an internal review by RMIT's student conduct team. In an email to Seymour, they stated the hearing would not proceed. A university spokesperson affirmed, "RMIT supports the exercise of freedom of speech, debate, and discourse among students that is lawful and free from any form of discrimination." Seymour celebrated the outcome as proof that "students and staff will not be intimidated," vowing to continue challenging university militarism.
This resolution underscores ongoing debates in Australian universities about balancing protest rights with operational safety, especially amid global conflicts like the Gaza war.
Gemma Seymour's Video and Activist Background
Gemma Seymour, a 2023 Bachelor of Arts (Fine Art) graduate from RMIT's School of Art, has long critiqued institutional ties to the military-industrial complex. Her graduate project, "RMIT Military Industrial Complex," examined university partnerships with weapons manufacturers, earning the Troppo Print Studio Graduate Award.
The video, filmed inside Building 12 at RMIT's Melbourne City campus, targeted the Sir Lawrence Wackett Centre. A thumbnail showed Seymour gesturing a middle finger toward signage—a gesture RMIT deemed offensive. The post gained traction amid national student strikes and encampments demanding divestment from companies linked to Israel's Gaza operations.
Seymour defended her actions, noting the centre's location is signposted publicly. "Freedom of speech and protest is a right to be used especially at times when our universities are complicit in genocide," she said post-withdrawal.
Supporters, including an open letter from RMIT staff and students, rallied behind her, opposing the proceedings as suppression of legitimate criticism.Overland open letter
The Sir Lawrence Wackett Centre: Defence Research Hub
Established in 1991 and named after aviation pioneer Sir Lawrence Wackett, the centre drives Australia's defence and aerospace innovation. It spans research from concept to implementation, fostering industry collaborations for security and resilience.
RMIT's 100-year defence partnership history includes WWII training. Today, the centre partners with Boeing, BAE Systems, Thales Australia, SAAB, Leonardo, Navantia, and government bodies like the Australian Defence Force (ADF), US Department of Defense, Defence Science and Technology Group (DSTG), and Australian Space Agency.RMIT partners list
Critics, including Seymour, highlight Boeing's role. Amnesty International reports Boeing weapons used in Gaza strikes killing civilians.Amnesty on F-35 parts Australian unis received $20m defence research grants in 2026, part of $200m+ contracts since 2024.
Defence funding bolsters higher ed: RMIT attracts global talent via fellowships, contributing to national tech economy.
RMIT's Rationale for Initial Misconduct Allegations
RMIT's student conduct report cited risks from revealing the centre's location: unwanted attention, harassment, threats, stress for staff/students. The gesture was seen as disrespectful, potentially disrupting teaching.
Under RMIT's policies, misconduct includes actions harming safety or reputation. Penalties ranged from warnings to suspension. The anonymous complaint amplified concerns post-2024 encampments.
RMIT emphasized procedural fairness, investigating per core values.
Seymour and Allies' Pushback: Free Speech Champion
Seymour argued the location is public, criticism ethical amid Gaza conflict (Hamas Oct 2023 attack: 1,200 killed; Israel response: 75,000+ Palestinian deaths per reports).
RMIT Students for Palestine celebrated the drop as anti-intimidation win. Staff open letter decried chilling effect on activism.
- Right to protest university complicity.
- Defence ties fuel war profiteering.
- Precedent for silencing dissent.
2024 Pro-Palestine Encampments: National Campus Uprising
Australia saw encampments at 10+ unis in 2024, inspired by US protests. Demands: divest weapons firms, condemn Gaza war.
RMIT: Alumni Courtyard encampment May 2024.
Melbourne U: 16,800 classes disrupted; 20 misconduct notices, 2 expelled June 2025.
Sydney U: Suspensions for disruption; international student expulsion threat withdrawn March 2025.
Monash: 9 misconduct allegations.
ANU: 10 disciplined.
121 encampments globally; Australia ~20-50 students each.
Disciplinary Trends: Crackdown or Legitimate Enforcement?
Unis issued notices for disruption, policy breaches. Melbourne U: expulsion hearings; some warnings only.
Critics: Repression of Palestine solidarity; free speech inquiry found restrictions.
Supporters: Protected Jewish students amid antisemitism rise (70% indirect racism report 2026).
Govt 2026 grading unis on protest/antisemitism handling.
Free Speech Frameworks in Australian Higher Ed
Australian unis uphold lawful protest per policies (e.g. Melbourne U: peaceful, no violence). Model Code on Free Speech 2019 mandates protection.
Tensions: Disruption vs rights. 2025 People's Inquiry: Palestine speech curtailed.
Experts: Balance academic freedom, safety; RMIT case shows review works.
Ethical Dilemmas: Defence Funding vs Activism
Defence R&D vital: $135m 2025 grants to unis/industry. RMIT leads aerospace.
Activists: Complicity in conflicts (Boeing Gaza links). Ethical investment pushes.
Counter: National security, jobs (thousands in sector).
Campus Impacts: Divided Communities
Protests sparked antisemitism claims; Jewish students felt unsafe. Respect at Uni report: Racism up, esp religious minorities.
Muslim students: Islamophobia rise. Unis urged dialogue.
Outlook: Activism Persists, Policies Evolve
RMIT case precedent for speech wins. Ongoing divest calls, defence scrutiny amid AUKUS ($368b subs).
Unis refine conduct codes; students push transparency. Balanced discourse key for higher ed.
For careers in turbulent times, explore higher ed career advice.
Photo by Hermes Rivera on Unsplash

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