University Protests: The Latest at Colleges Beyond Columbia
28/04/2024 16:51
As college students demand divestment from Israel and take up other pro-Palestine causes on campuses around the country, police crackdowns have followed in quick succession. Last week, Columbia University president Minouche Shafik allowed the NYPD onto campus last week to arrest students at the school's Gaza Solidarity Encampment; since then, similar encampments have cropped up at many colleges and universities, despite universities' efforts to dismantle them. Below, updates on where the protest movement is spreading and how the sometimes-violent backlash is playing out.
Northeastern University, Boston
On Saturday morning, police cleared an encampment of protesters which was set up on Thursday on the Centennial Common at Northeastern, with the demonstrators calling for a cease fire in Gaza and for the university to divest from its financial ties with Israel. Police arrested 100 people, but there were no reports of violence. The university said anyone with with a valid school ID was immediately released, and that it decided to clear the encampment due to the arrival of outside agitators and the use of hate speech:
What began as a student demonstration two days ago, was infiltrated by professional organizers with no affiliation to Northeastern. Last night, the use of virulent antisemitic slurs, including "Kill the Jews," crossed the line. We cannot tolerate this kind of hate on our campus.
However, according to a local reporter, it was a counter-protester who shouted "kill the Jews" — not someone in the encampment — and he was immediately booed by the pro-Palestine protesters:
I did hear "kill the Jews," said by a counter-protester holding an Israeli flag, seemingly as a provocative joke in response to the group's pro-Palestine chants. Not sure if that's the specific incident @Northeastern leadership is referring to https://t.co/taGU6PMrVupic.twitter.com/of22n8a4MK
— Tori Bedford (@Tori_Bedford) April 27, 2024
this is a video of the incident I mentioned, provided by an organizer with Huskies For A Free Palestine/HFP.NEU
— Tori Bedford (@Tori_Bedford) April 27, 2024
The student in the greenish blue sweatshirt holding the Israeli flag is a counter-protester pic.twitter.com/2KnUuFAkam
Reached for comment, a university spokesperson defended the decision to clear the encampment, insisting that context didn't matter:
undefinedThe fact that the phrase 'Kill the Jews' was shouted on our campus is not in dispute. The Boston Globe, a trusted news organization, reported it as fact. There is also substantial video evidence. Any suggestion that repulsive antisemitic comments are sometimes acceptable depending on the context is reprehensible.
That language has no place on any university campus.
Indiana University and Ohio State University
More than 30 students were arrested at Indiana University late on Thursday, and a dozen were arrested at Ohio State University. At both schools, students claimed there were snipers stationed on campus rooftops, though the Ohio State administration stated that these were state police officers working as spotters, which the school also employs during football games.
#American snipers on the roof of #Indiana University and #Ohio State University building overlooking pro-#Palestine protest. pic.twitter.com/BENSRGdCES
— EHA News (@eha_news) April 26, 2024
Emory University
Some of the most violent crackdowns took place at Emory University in Atlanta on Thursday, where videos showed police bringing students to the ground to detain them; a total of 28 people were arrested. Students, who were also protesting the university's involvement in a police-training facility known as "Cop City," allege that police used tear gas to disperse the crowd. One clip shows police Tasing a student who is already handcuffed and on the ground:
🇺🇸🇵🇸 Atlanta cops tase a black student and Palestine protestor to the ground at Emory College pic.twitter.com/2MDZga6Ust
— HOT SPOT (@HotSpotHotSpot) April 25, 2024
Among those arrested was the chair of Emory's philosophy department:
WATCH: Among those arrested today were Noelle McAfee, Chair of the Philosophy Department at Emory University.
— Patrick Quinn (@PatrickQuinnTV) April 25, 2024
I've asked for a comment from Emory on this arrest, no word yet.
This video provided to us by an #Emory PHD student. You can hear him in this video. @ATLNewsFirstpic.twitter.com/86aJgb7NUX
Emerson College
Over 100 people were arrested early on Thursday morning at Emerson College, where a student encampment had been in place since Sunday in an alley on Boylston Street at the edge of campus. Prior to raiding the camp, the Boston Police Department informed students that they were violating city laws around camping on city streets. Students attempted to stop the police in riot gear, leading to police "dragging people out," according to one Emerson student who spoke with CBS News. BPD states that four officers were injured in the process.
Emerson College right now: https://t.co/XaxiU51WKOpic.twitter.com/wRiawzHUbo
— Talia Jane (@taliaotg) April 25, 2024
University of Southern California
The Los Angeles Police Department states that 93 demonstrators were arrested for trespassing at the University of Southern California — not usually a hotbed of protest — where students set up an encampment on Wednesday. After the arrests, USC became the first major school to cancel its main graduation ceremony this year.
USC COPS VIOLENTLY ARRESTING@palyouthmvmt organizer. Protest turned violent at the University of Southern California (USC) campus. pic.twitter.com/JBGmflYV95
— Channel3 Now (@channel3nownews) April 24, 2024
University of Texas
At the University of Texas at Austin, state police on horseback and in riot gear arrested more than 50 protesters on Wednesday. A photographer for the local Fox affiliate was also arrested in the chaos:
Guy with camera gets rko'd by police at Palestine protest. #ut#palestine#protestpic.twitter.com/5HI2SU8VKs
— Christopher Kuhlman (@Chris_Kuhlman00) April 24, 2024
The demonstrations grew in size after cops cracked down, not an uncommon ocurrence:
Back at UT Austin for day two of protests. This one says it is both intended to support Gaza and to condemn the police response yesterday.
— Ryan Chandler (@RyanChandlerTV) April 25, 2024
The crowd is at least 5x larger than the crowd that showed up yesterday at this time. Peaceful, quiet. Very little law enforcement presence. pic.twitter.com/30PF3I5z1j
On Friday, the Travis County attorney's office said it would drop criminal trespassing charges against all 57 people officers had detained. KUT reports that those arrested will not be allowed back on campus for the remainder of the school year.
New York University
When the NYPD broke up an encampment at NYU on Monday night, they arrested more than 100 students and almost 20 professors. Soon after, NYU set up a large plywood barricade to block access to the former encampment area in Gould Plaza on West 4th Street.
Friend just sent me a video of them barricading Cadman Plaza at NYU where the demonstrations took place yesterday. pic.twitter.com/0Aob8AKuSj
— Arielle Angel (@ArielleLAngel) April 23, 2024
After the arrests, the dean of students at NYU reportedly emailed at least one student who was detained to offer support "processing this distressing experience." The email also stated that the school recognizes "that you might not be ready to connect or find it helpful — and that is okay."