The Guardian (USA)

NYPD investigat­ing alleged chemical attack on pro-Palestine Columbia University students

- Erum Salam

The New York police department announced on Tuesday it was investigat­ing an alleged chemical attack on students protesting in support of Palestine on Columbia University’s campus last week.

Students protesting Israel’s bombardmen­t of Gaza – which has killed more than 25,000 people, according to Palestinia­n health officials – reported being sprayed with a chemical that left many with symptoms such as nausea, abdominal pain, headaches and irritated eyes.

Columbia’s chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) said eight students were a hospitaliz­ed as a result. Students reported their clothes and hair had a foul smell for hours after the protest.

NYPD is investigat­ing claims that the chemical unleashed on these students is “skunk”, an agent developed in Israel and used as a crowd control weapon, most commonly in the occupied West Bank. SJP said the chemicals were sprayed by two students who are former Israeli soldiers, who mixed in with the crowd by wearing Palestinia­n keffiyehs. The Guardian could not verify this claim, and the NYPD and Columbia did not directly respond to questions about the identity of the perpetrato­rs. According to a statement from Columbia, “the alleged perpetrato­rs of the attack have been identified and immediatel­y banned from campus while law enforcemen­t’s investigat­ion proceeds”.

The NYPD told the Guardian that a total of six students filed police reports and that no arrests were made. A police spokespers­on said that the first victim who filed a report said she “smelled an unknown odor and began to feel nauseated and experience­d a burning sensation in her eyes”.

In a letter to students and facultysen­t on Monday, Columbia’s interim provost, Dennis Mitchell, wrote: “A deeply troubling incident occurred on the steps of Low Library on Friday. Numerous Columbia and Barnard students who attended a protest later reported being sprayed with a foul-smelling substance that required students to seek medical treatment.”

Mitchell added: “We condemn in the strongest possible terms any threats or acts of violence directed toward anyone in our community.”

Mitchell added that the university’s department of public safety is working with the NYPD and federal authoritie­s, and that “the New York City Police Department is taking the lead role in investigat­ing what appear to have been serious crimes, possibly hate crimes”.

The Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), called the use of a chemical on the grounds of a college campus “heinous”.

“It is an escalation of violence launched against peaceful protesters by individual­s who seek to inflict harm and undermine the principles of peaceful dialogue and dissent upheld in any democratic society,” said Afaf Nasher, CAIR-New York’s executive director, in a statement.

Columbia has been at the center of debate surroundin­g free speech on college campuses since the war in Gaza started. In November, the college banned two pro-Palestinia­n organizati­ons, SJP and Jewish Voices for Peace (JVP), for allegedly violating campus procedures by holding “unauthoriz­ed” events. Demonstrat­ions have persisted on campus neverthele­ss.

 ?? Photograph: Michael M Santiago/Getty Images ?? A pro-Palestinia­n protest at Columbia University in New York on 20 November 2023.
Photograph: Michael M Santiago/Getty Images A pro-Palestinia­n protest at Columbia University in New York on 20 November 2023.

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