PRO-PALESTINE CAMPS AT 3 U.S. VARSITIES CLEARED
Campus activists are calling for a ceasefire
POLICE detained nearly 200 people at three US universities on Saturday as they cleared pro-Palestinian encampments, in the latest campus clashes triggered by protests over Israel’s war against Hamas.
On the East Coast, police in Boston detained about 100 people while clearing a protest camp at Northeastern University, with social media posts showing security forces in riot gear and officers loading tents onto the back of a truck.
The action was taken after some protesters resorted to “virulent anti-Semitic slurs, including ‘Kill the Jews’”, Northeastern University said in a statement on social media platform X.
On the opposite side of the country, Arizona State University (ASU) police arrested 69 people for trespassing after the group set up an “unauthorised encampment” on campus.
Arizona State officials said a protest group — “most of whom were not ASU students, faculty or staff ” – had set up a camp on Friday and then ignored repeated orders to disperse.
And in the US heartland, police at Indiana University arrested 23 people as they cleared a campus protest camp, the Indiana Daily Student newspaper reported.
Police with shields, batons and other riot gear broke through a line of protesters who had linked arms, tackling those who did not move, the paper said.
The campus activists are calling for a ceasefire in Israel’s war with Hamas, as well as for colleges to sever ties with the country and with companies they say profit from the conflict.
The protests have posed a major challenge to university administrators who are trying to balance commitments to free expression with complaints that the rallies have veered into antiSemitism and hate speech.
Police have carried out largescale arrests at universities in recent days, at times using chemical irritants and tasers to disperse demonstrators.
In a statement on X, Northeastern said the area on campus where the protests were held was now “fully secured” and “all campus operations have returned to normal”.
The school said it made the move after “what began as a student demonstration two days ago was infiltrated by professional organisers with no affiliation to Northeastern”.
It added that detained individuals who produced a valid school ID have been released and will face disciplinary proceedings, not legal action.
“Those who refused to disclose their affiliation were arrested,” the school said.
Dozens of students remained encamped on Saturday at the University of Pennsylvania, despite the college president ordering disbandment after what he said were “credible reports of harassing and intimidating conduct”.
Meanwhile, Columbia University in New York, where the protests originated, was relatively calm. Officials there announced on Friday that they would not be calling police back to campus after more than 100 people were arrested last week.
“Chants, signs, taunts and social media posts from our own students that mock and threaten to ‘kill’ Jewish people are totally unacceptable, and Columbia students who are involved in such incidents will be held accountable,” the school said.
California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt announced it was closing campus until the end of the semester, with instruction and work continuing remotely after protesters repeatedly attempted to “break into multiple locked buildings with the intention of either locking themselves in, vandalising or stealing equipment”.