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UK: Students want Strauss-Kahn speech cancelled
Students at Cambridge University are circulating a petition against a planned speech there by Dominique Strauss-Kahn.
London: Students at Cambridge University are circulating a petition against a planned speech there by former IMF head Dominique Strauss-Kahn, whose career and French presidential ambitions were derailed by a sex assault case last May.
A women`s group at the university sent an open letter to the Cambridge Union Society, which has invited Strauss-Kahn to speak on March 09, asking the invitation be revoked given an ongoing civil case against the former French finance minister.
"To choose to give this man an opportunity to speak trivialises the experiences of women who bravely come forward and report rape and sexual assault, and reinforces the institutional sexism that faces women who do so," said Ruth Graham, a spokeswoman for the Cambridge University Students` Union Women`s Campaign.
Strauss-Kahn has lived largely behind closed doors since his alleged assault of a New York hotel maid blew into one of the seediest scandals to hit such a prominent public figure, but is now making a foray onto the international speech circuit. Apart from the planned speech in Cambridge, he addressed an economic event in Beijing in December and is scheduled to speak at a conference in Brussels on March 27 alongside Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker.
In the open letter to the Cambridge Union, a debating club, the Women`s Campaign said the decision to invite Strauss-Kahn displayed "a callous desire to exploit gender crime allegations in the service of controversy”.
Around 370 students have signed the petition so far.
Katie Lam, president of the Cambridge Union Society, said Strauss-Kahn had been invited to speak about the state of the eurozone and the global economy.
"The purpose of the Union is to provide a neutral platform for free speech ... An invitation to the Union does not imply support or endorsement," she said.
"We have a vast range of people speak here with a huge spectrum of views, and hear from people regardless of their ideology, background or personal history," she said in an e-mail in response to a request for comment. The attempted rape charge against Strauss-Kahn was eventually dropped after prosecutors doubted the credibility of the maid, but she is pursuing a civil case against him that opens next month in New York.
Strauss-Kahn was held for two days in a police station in the northern French city of Lille this week, spending a night in a small cell, while investigators questioned him over his dealings with an alleged prostitution ring.
Bureau Report
A women`s group at the university sent an open letter to the Cambridge Union Society, which has invited Strauss-Kahn to speak on March 09, asking the invitation be revoked given an ongoing civil case against the former French finance minister.
"To choose to give this man an opportunity to speak trivialises the experiences of women who bravely come forward and report rape and sexual assault, and reinforces the institutional sexism that faces women who do so," said Ruth Graham, a spokeswoman for the Cambridge University Students` Union Women`s Campaign.
Strauss-Kahn has lived largely behind closed doors since his alleged assault of a New York hotel maid blew into one of the seediest scandals to hit such a prominent public figure, but is now making a foray onto the international speech circuit. Apart from the planned speech in Cambridge, he addressed an economic event in Beijing in December and is scheduled to speak at a conference in Brussels on March 27 alongside Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker.
In the open letter to the Cambridge Union, a debating club, the Women`s Campaign said the decision to invite Strauss-Kahn displayed "a callous desire to exploit gender crime allegations in the service of controversy”.
Around 370 students have signed the petition so far.
Katie Lam, president of the Cambridge Union Society, said Strauss-Kahn had been invited to speak about the state of the eurozone and the global economy.
"The purpose of the Union is to provide a neutral platform for free speech ... An invitation to the Union does not imply support or endorsement," she said.
"We have a vast range of people speak here with a huge spectrum of views, and hear from people regardless of their ideology, background or personal history," she said in an e-mail in response to a request for comment. The attempted rape charge against Strauss-Kahn was eventually dropped after prosecutors doubted the credibility of the maid, but she is pursuing a civil case against him that opens next month in New York.
Strauss-Kahn was held for two days in a police station in the northern French city of Lille this week, spending a night in a small cell, while investigators questioned him over his dealings with an alleged prostitution ring.
Bureau Report