They also vowed to ‘educate students on the dangers of the Prevent Strategy’.
The Students not Suspects campaign has been criticised for its links to CAGE, which described Isis butcher Mohammed Emwazi – known as Jihadi John – as a ‘beautiful young man’.
The group’s outreach director, Moazzam Begg, has appeared as a speaker at many of the campus events held across the country by the NUS-run campaign.
Yesterday, it also emerged that other Muslim student leaders in other Manchester universities have been calling for Prevent to be abolished.
During a phone-in with Radio 5 Live, Mohammed Ullah, Muslim chaplain for Manchester University and Manchester Metropolitan University, said: ‘As it stands [Prevent] is a toxic brand.
'It isolates the very people it is supposed to help. Because it turns people into spies against their own community.’
He said he had never reported anyone to Prevent but would have to do so if the situation arose because he was ‘duty bound’.
‘The Muslim community in Manchester are especially against it,’ he said. ‘We need to work with the Muslim community instead of turning them into suspects constantly.’
Yesterday, the University of Salford said Mr Hall’s comments represented his personal views and not those of the university.
They added that the student union is a separate entity to the university.