From the BBC:
“Columbia protesters take over
building after defying deadline”
Dozens of pro-Palestinian
demonstrators at Columbia University have escalated their protest over the war
in Gaza by occupying an academic building. Activists at the university in New
York City seized Hamilton Hall early on Tuesday, barricading themselves inside.
One student said the campus was "lawless", as officials grapple with
the long-running demo which has prompted a wave of rallies elsewhere. Columbia
has urged students and staff to stay away from campus on Tuesday. It earlier
began suspending students who defied Monday's deadline of 14:00 EST (18:00 GMT)
to leave their two-week encampment nearby. But as the deadline passed, dozens
of students rallied at the site.
Columbia Students for Justice in
Palestine (SJP), one of the main protest groups, vowed to defy the order in a
post on X, and called on activists to "protect the encampment". The
group later announced the takeover of Hamilton Hall, highlighting that the
venue was also the focus of student protests in 1968. Another group, Columbia
University Apartheid Divest (CUAD), said it had "reclaimed" the
building in honour of Hind Rajab, a six-year-old girl found dead in Gaza
earlier this year. One student described the campus as "lawless, utter
anarchy", with demonstrators breaking the building's windows to enter,
before blocking the doors with furniture. Speaking to the BBC's US partner CBS
News, Jessica Schwalb said the group had entered with "bags full of
stuff", adding: "I'm guessing they're going to be living in there
indefinitely."
What do student protesters at
US universities want? Demonstrations have rocked campuses across the US in
recent weeks, sparked by New York police clearing an earlier encampment at
Columbia. Hundreds of people have been arrested across the country -
among them dozens of protesters at the University of Texas at Austin on Monday.
Officials there said protesters had ignored directions to take down their
tents and that "baseball-size rocks" had been found in the
encampment. The UN human rights chief Volker Turk has voiced his concern
that some law enforcement actions witnessed on American campuses have been
"disproportionate in their impacts". "Freedom of
expression and the right to peaceful assembly are fundamental to society,"
he added in a statement.
At Virginia Commonwealth
University (VCU) in Richmond, students said police used tear gas and pepper
spray against their gathering on Monday. The university said the group had been
"repeatedly" asked to leave, and echoed other institutions by saying
many of those involved in the demonstration were not students.
Elsewhere, there has been a rare agreement reached in Evanston, Illinois, between Northwestern University and protesters who have camped out for days in solidarity with the Palestinians. Under the deal, the university said it would permit "peaceful demonstrations", provided the encampment was limited to a single tent.
Activists across the US are
demanding that their universities, many with massive endowments, financially
divest from Israel. Divestment means to sell or otherwise drop financial ties. Pressure
has been building on the leadership of Columbia - an elite Ivy League
university in Upper Manhattan - to act, or step aside. Posting on X before the
occupation of Hamilton Hall, US House Speaker Mike Johnson labelled the scenes
at Columbia an "utter disgrace" and called on the university's
president to step down. Columbia's campus has become the focal point of the
country's debate over the war in Gaza and US support for Israel, as well as
fears that antisemitism is putting Jewish students in danger. Earlier on
Monday, a group of House Democrats urged its board of trustees to resign if it
could not "act decisively, disband the encampment, and ensure the safety
and security of all of its students". Annual tuition and fees for Columbia
add up to around $90,000 (£72,000) for undergraduates, making it one of the
most expensive universities in the US.
More than 100 people were
arrested when police raided the earlier encampment on 18 April. But activists
redoubled their efforts, regrouping in another encampment and prompting
university leadership to move to hybrid learning. A statement on Monday from
Columbia's president, Dr Minouche Shafik, reiterated that the university
"will not divest from Israel", and that talks between academic
leaders and student organisers had failed to result in an agreement. Several
hours after the deadline passed for students to take down their camp - and
before the break-in at Hamilton Hall was reported - another official said the
university had started to suspend students. This makes them ineligible to
graduate. Officials say they want to avoid any disruption to graduation
ceremonies on 15 May. Another of the protesters' demands is amnesty for
activists who face disciplinary action from the university. For now, the
cluster of tents remains in place. Mahmoud Khalil, one of the students who has
been negotiating with Columbia officials, told the BBC that protesters believed
it was "highly probable" that police would again be called in again. "The
students are here," added Mr Khalil, who said he was a Palestinian refugee
who grew up in Syria. "They are holding their ground." Many wore face
coverings, telling the BBC they were worried about being recognised and facing
recrimination. But the university wrote in its letter on Monday that it had
already identified several participants.
The BBC is tracking protests or
encampments on campuses in at least 22 other states and Washington DC. They
have also been reported in Canada, France and Australia. Jewish students on
numerous campuses have voiced concern about their safety, amid alleged
incidents of harassment and threats of violence by some protests participants, The
White House is walking an increasingly fine line over the campus protests,
seeking to balance the right to peaceful protest with condemnation of hate
speech. "It is a painful moment, we get that," press secretary Karine
Jean-Pierre said. Declining to say how university leadership should act, she
added: "Free expression has to be done within the law." Republicans,
including former President Donald Trump, have also highlighted antisemitic
chants and incidents at the protests.
^ These Anti-Jewish Protesters
continue to show just how much they hate Jews and how much they are willing to
resort to violence.
I heard that Protesters were
worried that they could lose Internships, Scholarships and even Future
Jobs/Careers because of these University Protests.
Good!
I hope they do!
No Company or Organization should
want to hire people who are violently Anti-Jewish.
I hope Columbia and the other
Universities come to their senses and realize that they can't talk with these
kind of violence people.
Send in the Police and bring
safety to these Campuses and to the Jewish Students studying there. ^
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