East Bay Times

Students attending prestigiou­s Paris university occupy campus building

- By Jeffery Schaffer and Barbara Surk

Students in Paris inspired by Gaza solidarity encampment­s at campuses in the United States blocked access to a campus building at a prestigiou­s French university Friday, prompting administra­tors to move all classes online.

The pro-Palestinia­n protest kicked off a day of drama at the Paris Institute of Political Studies, known as Sciences Po, which counts President Emmanuel Macron and Prime Minister Gabriel Attal among its many famous alumni.

Protesters first occupied a central campus building and blocked its entrance with trash cans, wooden platforms and a bicycle. They also gathered at the building's windows, chanting proPalesti­nian slogans, and hung out Palestinia­n flags and placards reading “We are all Palestinia­ns.”

Later Friday, pro-Palestinia­n and proIsraeli demonstrat­ors faced each other in a tense standoff in the street outside the school. Riot police stepped in to separate the opposing groups.

As evening fell, a dwindling group of pro-Palestinia­n protesters refused to budge, ignoring police orders to evacuate the street. Others left peacefully, escorted away from the area by police.

The Gaza war is sharply divisive in France, which has the largest population­s of Muslims and Jews in western

Europe. France initially sought to ban pro-Palestinia­n demonstrat­ions after Hamas' surprise Oct. 7 attack on Israel that sparked the war. Antisemiti­sm has surged.

Among protesters' demands was that Sciences Po sever ties with Israeli schools.

Wednesday evening, more than 100 pro-Palestinia­n protesters had also occupied a Sciences Po amphitheat­er. Most agreed to leave after discussion­s with management but a small group of students remained. They were removed by police later that night, according to French media reports.

The university administra­tion closed all university buildings and moved classes online Friday. It said in a statement it “strongly condemns these student actions which prevent the proper functionin­g of the institutio­n and penalize Sciences Po students, teachers and employees.”

The statement said about 60 protesters were inside the occupied building and that administra­tors were meeting with a student delegation “to try to find a way out of this situation through dialogue.”

Louise, a protester, said the students' actions were inspired by similar demonstrat­ions at New York's Columbia University and other U.S. campuses.

“But our solidarity remains first and foremost with the Palestinia­n people,” she said.

 ?? JEFFREY SCHAEFFER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Students block the Sciences Po university Friday in Paris on Friday.
JEFFREY SCHAEFFER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Students block the Sciences Po university Friday in Paris on Friday.

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