Police Clash With Palestine Protesters on Multiple Campuses

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Photo: Kirby Lee via AP

Last week, the NYPD arrived on Columbia University's campus and arrested students involved in a pro-Palestine encampment. Earlier this week, police officers arrested demonstrators at Yale and the University of Minnesota. And on Wednesday, law enforcement broke up protests at the University of Texas at Austin and the University of Southern California.

On Wednesday, hundreds of protesters gathered on UT Austin's campus as part of a scheduled class walkout by the school's chapter of the Palestine Solidarity Committee. The event called for participants to occupy the university's South Lawn as they demanded the administration divest from companies linked to Israel. Ahead of the planned protest, school officials notified the event organizers that their event was not allowed and that participants might be subject to arrest and suspensions.

Footage from KXAN, a local NBC affiliate, shows Texas state troopers in riot gear arresting protesters after giving the crowd a warning to disperse. The Texas Tribune reports that at least ten people were arrested during the standoff.

A similar scene unfolded at the University of Southern California, where more than a hundred protesters took part in a pro-Palestine encampment of the university's Alumni Park. During the protest, organized by the school's Divest From Death coalition, students frequently picked up and moved their tents so they wouldn't run afoul of the school's rule barring on-campus camping, per the Los Angeles Times. USC has recently been at the center of controversy after barring the 2024 class valedictorian from speaking following criticism of one of her social-media posts by pro-Israel groups. In footage from the Times, officers from the university's department of public safety can be seen grappling with protesters and even pulling out batons.

One person was detained by law enforcement, but was reportedly let go after students surrounded the car they were being transported in.

Also Wednesday, pro-Palestine students whose organization had been banned established a small encampment at Harvard, setting up a likely clash with administrators.

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