University officials to be grilled over anti-Semitism

July 15, 2026 06:13 | News

University vice-chancellors will face a grilling from the royal commission probing anti-Semitism, as representatives from Australia’s highest ranked institution prepare to be the first to give evidence.

The University of Melbourne’s Glyn Davis, who is interim vice-chancellor, will appear at the royal commission’s public hearing on Wednesday.

Professor Davis’ attendance will follow the damning testimony a day prior given by Jewish academic Steven Prawer, who had his campus office broken into and occupied by protesters in 2024.

“We reaffirm our commitment to a safe, inclusive and supportive environment for all and acknowledge the important work of the Royal Commission,” a statement from Melbourne University reads.

“As a diverse university community, we must come together and stand united in our continued efforts to eradicate hate and discrimination in all forms.”

ROD SIMS ROSS GARNAUT PRESS CLUB
The University of Melbourne’s interim vice-chancellor Glyn Davis will face the royal commission. (Lukas Coch/AAP PHOTOS)

A former Israeli soldier told the inquiry he had been “rushed” at during university protests when he tried to speak with students.

Yotam Barazani, a 29-year-old cybersecurity professional attended a pro-Palestine encampment at Deakin University in May 2024, holding a sign that read: “I want peace for all. Let’s talk”. 

He said he was pushed to the ground and had his sign taken. 

“I thought I’d be clever and there was a sign of theirs (the protesters) next to me,” he said.

“I picked it up with the hope to say: ‘Hey, give me back my sign and I’ll give you back yours, but that could not come to fruition because the moment I touched the signed, I got rushed by what seemed ot be 20 to 30 protesters.”

Mr Barazani grew up in Israel and spent two years as a paratrooper for the Israeli military before he was employed as a sessional tutor in Australia.

The Royal Commission on Anti-Semitism and Social Cohesion is spending a week hearing from university staff and students about their experiences of hatred, along with trying to untangle hate speech from legitimate criticism of Israel.

AAP News

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