East Bay Times

Student activists end pro-Palestine camp-in protest

Overnight demonstrat­ion ends after 120 days; school officials agree to listen to grievances

- By Ryan Macasero rmacasero @bayareanew­sgroup.com

Stanford University students protesting the war in Gaza agreed to end their overnight camp-in Friday after 120 days of an on-campus demonstrat­ion.

The agreement comes as university officials said they would not take legal or administra­tive actions against students who have participat­ed in the protest, which began Oct. 20.

“The University has agreed to refrain from initiating law enforcemen­t action and Office of Community standards Proceeding­s until after that time, in order to support an orderly end to overnight camping in White Plaza,” Stanford said in a statement. “We understand and appreciate the passionate­ly held beliefs of students who are engaged in advocacy of White Plaza. Stanford continues to firmly support the peaceful expression of divergent views by members of our community, and we will continue working to provide for the physical safety and well-being of all members of our community.”

The group has been demanding that Stanford boycott — and divest — from companies and other entities supporting Israel's military action in Gaza. They also are urging the university to issue a statement condemning Israel, calling for a cease-fire and to ensure the safety of Palestinia­n and Arab students on campus.

The agreement came after the university attempted to clear protestors from the site Thursday.

Upon learning of the university's plans to shut down the camp-in, about 500 to 600 activists came in support of the demonstrat­ors, with about 100 of them sleeping on campus overnight.

On any given day during the sit-in, dozens to a hundred

activists stayed overnight.

While Stanford has not agreed to student demands, they did agree to come to the negotiatin­g table.

According to one student, the university broke its promise not to take law enforcemen­t action.

Stanford student activist Draper Dayton said early Wednesday morning that the Department of Public Safety and Stanford's police department attempted to collect names and identities of student protestors.

In a statement to this news organizati­on, university spokespers­on Dee Mostofi said the university has “not breached the agreement in any way.”

As far as student identifica­tion, Mostofi said a security patrol was routine.

“A security contractor has continued providing routine security in the White Plaza area on a 24/7 basis to support the safety of everyone in the area, as has been occurring for several months,” Mostofi added.

“This agreement was not exactly what we wanted,” Dayton said, “We had to

commit without guarantees of progress of demand. However, we felt that for the safety of the dozens and dozens of members who would be exposed to harm, it was the right thing to do.”

According to Dayton, the group is not a formal organizati­on and is not linked to any other groups.

Despite the university's promise not to take police action and pursue administra­tive and legal action against the students, many still were on edge.

Activists maintain they were subjected to surveillan­ce and threats over the past several months. The spot where the tents are set up on White Plaza is surrounded by other canopies, occupied by food stalls and other student organizati­ons.

Friday afternoon, a few dozen students were in the “Sit-in to Stop Genocide” tent. Although there was disappoint­ment with the agreement to end the sitin, the mood was generally calm among the remaining protestors.

Graduate student Kavya Varkey said that while ending the sit-in was not ideal,

“it appears that we now have a pathway to negotiatio­ns and progress that was not available to us before.”

Student activists at UC Berkeley and UCLA held similar protests last year demanding their administra­tions take a stronger stance against Israel's military strikes in Gaza.

At least 28,000 Palestinia­ns have been killed since the conflict began, according to a Reuters report citing data from the Hamasrun health ministry in Gaza. Hamas, designated a terrorist organizati­on by the United States, Canada and the European Union, has controlled Gaza since 2007. In October, Hamas attacked Israel, killing more than 1,400 people and taking hundreds of hostages, according to Israeli authoritie­s.

For Varkey and Dayton, who say they have both lost sleep and weight since the beginning of the protest, packing up doesn't mean the end.

“It will continue in another form,” Varkey said. Dayton said that the next iteration of the protest will have a “more angry tone.”

 ?? SHAE HAMMOND — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Students at a camp-in site in White Plaza at Stanford University students protest the war in Gaza on Friday. Students participat­ing refused to show their faces and share names due to fear of retaliatio­n from school officials.
SHAE HAMMOND — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Students at a camp-in site in White Plaza at Stanford University students protest the war in Gaza on Friday. Students participat­ing refused to show their faces and share names due to fear of retaliatio­n from school officials.

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