South China Morning Post

Dozens arrested as campuses hit by Gaza war protests

House speaker warns National Guard could be deployed after police battle students nationwide

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Spiralling pro-Palestinia­n protests that are rocking universiti­es across the US spread to more campuses, triggering suggestion­s from a senior Republican leader that the National Guard could be brought in.

The comments from House Speaker Mike Johnson are likely to evoke strong emotions in a country where the 1970 killing by National Guardsmen of unarmed students protesting against the Vietnam war lives on in folk memory.

Demonstrat­ions erupted at the University of Southern California on Wednesday, and in Texas, where a tense stand-off developed between students and police in riot gear, with more than 20 people detained.

It was the latest confrontat­ion between law enforcemen­t and students angry at the mounting death toll in Israel’s war against Hamas.

The movement began at Columbia University in New York where dozens of arrests were made last week after university authoritie­s called in police to quell an occupation that Jewish students said was threatenin­g and antisemiti­c.

Johnson told reporters at Columbia on Wednesday that if the demonstrat­ions were not contained quickly it would be “an appropriat­e time for the National Guard”. “We have to bring order to these campuses,” he said.

He said he intended to demand US President Joe Biden “take action”, and warned that the demonstrat­ions “place a target on the backs of Jewish students in the United States”.

White House spokeswoma­n Karine Jean-Pierre said Biden backed free speech.

“The president believes that free speech, debate and nondiscrim­ination on college campuses are important,” she said.

US ally Israel launched its war in Gaza after the Hamas attack on October 7 that left some 1,170 people dead, according to Israeli official figures.

Student protesters say they are expressing solidarity with Palestinia­ns in Gaza, where the death toll has topped 34,200, according to the Hamas-run health ministry, and are calling on Columbia and other universiti­es to divest from companies with ties to Israel.

The demonstrat­ors – including a number of Jewish students – have disavowed instances of antisemiti­sm.

But pro-Israel supporters, and others worried about campus safety, have pointed to antisemiti­c incidents and argued that campuses were encouragin­g intimidati­on and hate speech.

Johnson’s visit to Columbia came as Texas deployed police in riot gear at the University of Texas in Austin where hundreds of protesters staged a boisterous walkout, chanting “down with occupation”.

Police said they had arrested more than 20 people, with the state’s governor Greg Abbott urging swift punishment.

“These protesters belong in jail,” he wrote on social media. “Students joining in hate-filled, antisemiti­c protests at any public college or university in Texas should be expelled.”

Police were on the scene in Los Angeles after hundreds of students began what they called an occupation on the campus of the University of Southern California.

Students chanted “Free free Palestine” as well as the controvers­ial slogan “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free”, which some interpret as calling for the destructio­n of the state of Israel.

“We’re just trying to advocate for our brothers and sisters in Palestine who just don’t have a voice right now,” biology student Yaseen El-Magharbel said.

The university said it was closing the campus to outside visitors, though classes and other activities would continue.

Students have also launched protests at schools, including Yale, the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, UC Berkeley, the University of Michigan and Brown University.

Social media images showed an encampment taking shape at Harvard University.

We have to bring order to these campuses

HOUSE SPEAKER MIKE JOHNSON

Classes were moved online and other on-campus activities cancelled at California State Polytechni­c University, Humboldt, after protesters barricaded themselves in a campus building.

More than 130 people were arrested at a pro-Palestinia­n protest at New York University on Monday night.

And police at the University of Minnesota reportedly detained nine people at an encampment.

NBC reported that the FBI was coordinati­ng with universiti­es over antisemiti­c threats and possible violence in connection with the ongoing wave of rallies.

Before Johnson’s visit to Columbia, an uneasy truce was in place between students and officials. The university had set a deadline of midnight on Tuesday to disperse, but as more people joined the protest, the school gave a 48-hour extension, students said on social media.

They agreed to the ongoing talks after the school promised not to call the police or National Guard, organisers with Columbia University Apartheid Divest said.

“We fear that Columbia is risking a second Jackson State or Kent State massacre,” the group said in the social media post.

In 1970, demonstrat­ions at Kent State University in Ohio were met with deadly force from the National Guard, who fired into a crowd, killing four unarmed students and wounding nine. Eleven days later, Jackson State in Mississipp­i also saw police confront student protesters and open fire, killing two and injuring 12.

 ?? Photo: AP ?? Police arrest a man during the protest at the University of Texas in Austin, where more than 20 people were taken into custody.
Photo: AP Police arrest a man during the protest at the University of Texas in Austin, where more than 20 people were taken into custody.

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