British students occupied buildings at several universities yesterday in protest against government plans to triple fees, a day after demonstrators attacked a police van and clashed with officers in London.

Oxford University, University College London, Cardiff University and other institutions across the country reported that hundreds of students had staged sit-ins overnight.

On Wednesday, an estimated 10,000 people took part in the second mass protest in London this month, taking out their anger on a besieged police van and starting fires before they were contained for hours in the cold by officers.

Aaron Porter, president of the National Union of Students, told the BBC that the protests were “only the beginning” of widespread action against the coalition government’s plans to hike university tuition fees.

He blamed the violence, however, on “professional troublemakers”.

Thirty-two people were arrested in London and two police officers and 15 protesters were injured, Scotland Yard said. Two protesters were arrested in Cambridge, one in Liverpool, four in Manchester and six in Brighton.

At Oxford, a university spokes­man said a “small number” of students were early yesterday occupying the Radcliffe Camera, a huge domed building that is part of the university’s centuries-old Bodleian Library.

A spokeswoman for University College London said about 50 people were still staging a sit-in in one of the university’s main buildings, and Cardiff University in Wales said students were occupying a lecture hall. Students are furious at plans by Prime Minister David Cameron’s coalition for a sharp rise in fees to up to £9,000 a year as part of deep public spending cuts intended to pay off a record deficit.

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