CAMBRIDGE, England — About three dozen pro-Palestinian protesters crawled out of their tents Thursday morning at Cambridge University, grabbed coffee and tea and sat in a circle for the daily briefing.
Drink water, display the Palestinian colors, don't talk to reporters, their leader said at the 43-tent encampment beneath the gothic spires of King's College Chapel. In case of trouble, one group member hovered along the adjacent King's Parade wearing a neon yellow vest marked ''Police Liaison.''
But after the third night of the encampment, there had been no need for the police despite a small number of counter-demonstrators, according to protesters and local merchants. At most, the group's chanting on Monday led a few customers to abandon their sidewalk café tables and head indoors, said Beverley Atay, manager of the Copper Kettle across the street.
''They're just expressing their point of view, which is their right,'' she said, watching the scene outside the café's windows.
Despite the relative calm at Cambridge and other U.K. campuses, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak summoned university leaders to his Downing Street offices on Thursday in an effort to head off the kind of student unrest that has gripped the U.S. in recent weeks.
Before the meeting, Sunak warned of ''students and academic staff being targeted, threatened, and assaulted simply for being Jewish.''
''We will always protect freedom of speech and the right to protest,'' Sunak wrote in the Times of London. ''But just as importantly, universities have a profound duty to remain bastions of tolerance, where such debate takes place with respect for others — and where every student feels safe and at home, whatever their faith or background.''
Sunak's intervention came after pro-Palestinian protesters built encampments at about a dozen U.K. universities over the past two weeks as some students and academics call on the institutions to cut ties with Israel over the conflict in Gaza.