Police arrest dozens of pro-Palestinian protesters at Columbia
University
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[May 01, 2024]
By Jonathan Allen and Caitlin Ochs
NEW YORK (Reuters) -New York City police arrested dozens of
pro-Palestinian demonstrators holed-up in an academic building on
Columbia University campus late on Tuesday and removed a protest
encampment the Ivy League school had sought to dismantle for nearly two
weeks.
Shortly after police moved in, Columbia University President Minouche
Shafik released a letter in which she requested police stay on campus
until at least May 17 - two days after graduation - "to maintain order
and ensure that encampments are not re-established."
Within three hours the campus had been cleared of protesters, said a
police spokesperson, adding "dozens" of arrests were made.
At the start of the police operation around 9 p.m. ET throngs of
helmeted police marched onto the elite campus in upper Manhattan, a
focal point of student rallies that have spread to dozens of schools
across the U.S. in recent days expressing opposition to Israel's war in
Gaza.
"We're clearing it out," the police officers yelled.
Soon after, a long line of officers climbed into Hamilton Hall, an
academic building that protesters had broken into and occupied in the
early morning hours of Tuesday. Police entered through a second-story
window, using a police vehicle equipped with a ladder.
Students standing outside the hall jeered police with shouts of "Shame,
shame!"
Police were seen loading dozens of detainees onto a bus, each with their
hands bound behind their backs by zip-ties, the entire scene illuminated
with flashing red and blue lights of police vehicles.
"Free, free, free Palestine," chanted protesters outside the building.
Others yelled "Let the students go."
“Columbia will be proud of these students in five years,” said Sueda
Polat, one of the student negotiators for Columbia University Apartheid
Divest, the coalition of student groups that has organized the protests.
She said students did not pose a danger and called on police to back
down, speaking as officers shouted at her and others to retreat or leave
campus.
PROTEST DEMANDS
Protesters were seeking three demands from Columbia: divestment from
companies supporting Israel's government, greater transparency in
university finances, and amnesty for students and faculty disciplined
over the protests.
President Shafik this week said Columbia would not divest from finances
in Israel. Instead, she offered to invest in health and education in
Gaza and make Columbia's direct investment holdings more transparent.
In her letter released on Tuesday, Shafik said the Hamilton Hall
occupiers had vandalized University property and were trespassing, and
that encampment protesters were suspended for trespassing. The
university earlier warned that students taking part in the Hamilton Hall
occupation faced academic expulsion.
The occupation began overnight when protesters broke windows, stormed
inside and unfurled a banner reading "Hind's Hall," saying they were
renaming the building for a 6-year-old Palestinian child killed in Gaza
by the Israeli military.
The eight-story, neo-classical building has been the site of various
student occupations dating back to the 1960s.
At an evening news briefing held a few hours before police entered
Columbia, Mayor Eric Adams and city police officials said the Hamilton
Hall takeover was instigated by "outside agitators" who lack any
affiliation with Columbia and are known to law enforcement for provoking
lawlessness.
Police said they based their conclusions in part on escalating tactics
in the occupation, including vandalism, use of barricades to block
entrances and destruction of security cameras.
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A broken window is seen after police cleared Columbia University's
Hamilton Hall, which had been occupied by protesters in support of
Palestinians, during the ongoing conflict between Israel and the
Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in New York City, U.S., April 30,
2024. Ben Chang/Columbia University/Handout via REUTERS
One of the student leaders of the protest, Mahmoud Khalil, a
Palestinian scholar attending Columbia's School of International and
Public Affairs, disputed assertions that outsiders led the
occupation.
"Disruptions on campus have created a threatening environment for
many of our Jewish students and faculty and a noisy distraction that
interferes with the teaching, learning and preparing for final
exams," the university said in a statement on Tuesday before police
moved in.
PROTESTS ACROSS COUNTRY
The Oct. 7 attack on southern Israel by Hamas militants from Gaza,
and the ensuing Israeli offensive on the Palestinian enclave, have
unleashed the biggest outpouring of U.S. student activism since the
anti-racism protests of 2020.
Pro-Palestinian demonstrators also gathered at City College New York
in Harlem late Tuesday, with the university ordering individuals off
the campus, New York Police Department Deputy Commissioner Kaz
Daughtry said in an X post. Dozens of protesters were arrested, the
New York Times reported.
Daughtry also said the university had requested police presence to
assist in dispersing trespassers.
The Chancellor at the University of California in Los Angeles said
late Tuesday that law enforcement was engaged to investigate 'recent
acts of violence' by a group of demonstrators and increased security
in the area.
Many of the demonstrations across the country have been met with
counter-protesters accusing them of fomenting anti-Jewish hatred.
The pro-Palestinian side, including Jews opposed to Israeli actions
in Gaza, say they are being unfairly branded as antisemitic for
criticizing Israel's government and expressing support for human
rights.
The issue has taken on political overtones in the run-up to the U.S.
presidential election in November, with Republicans accusing some
university administrators of turning a blind eye to antisemitic
rhetoric and harassment.
White House spokesperson John Kirby on Tuesday called the occupation
of campus buildings "the wrong approach."
New York Police Department officials had stressed before Tuesday
night's sweep that officers would refrain from entering the campus
unless Columbia administrators invited their presence, as they did
on April 18, when NYPD officers removed an earlier encampment. More
than 100 arrests were made at that time, stirring an outcry by many
students and staff.
Dozens of tents, pitched on a hedge-lined grassy area - beside a
smaller lawn since planted with hundreds of small Israeli flags -
were put back up days later.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen, Caitlin Ochs and Yann Tessier in New
York; additional reporting by Daniel Trotta, Brad Brooks, Steve
Gorman, Brendan O'Brien, Rich McKay and Chandni Shah; Writing by
Steve Gorman; editing by Frank McGurty, Donna Bryson, Bill Berkrot,
Jonathan Oatis, Lincoln Feast and Michael Perry)
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