Cape Argus

White House calls for peaceful campus demonstrat­ions

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THE White House insisted yesterday that pro-Palestinia­n protests that have rocked US universiti­es in recent weeks must remain peaceful, after police arrested around 275 people on four separate campuses over the weekend.

“We certainly respect the right of peaceful protests,” National Security Council spokespers­on John Kirby said,

But, he added, “we absolutely condemn the anti-Semitism language that we’ve heard of late and certainly condemn all the hate speech and the threats of violence out there.”

The wave of demonstrat­ions began at Columbia University in New York but they have since spread rapidly across the country.

While peace has prevailed in many campuses, the number of protesters detained – at times by police in riot gear using chemical irritants and tasers – is rising fast. They include 100 at Northeaste­rn University in Boston, 80 at Washington University in St Louis, 72 at Arizona State University and 23 at Indiana University.

Among those arrested at Washington University was Green Party presidenti­al candidate Jill Stein, who faulted police for aggressive tactics she said provoked the sort of trouble they are meant to quell.

“This is about freedom of speech… on a very critical issue,” she said before her arrest on Saturday. “And there they are, sending in the riot police and basically creating a riot.”

College administra­tors have struggled to find the best response, caught between the need to respect freespeech rights and the imperative of containing inflammato­ry and sometimes violently anti-Semitic calls by protesters. At the University of Southern California, school officials closed the main campus to the public late on Saturday after pro-Palestinia­n groups again set up an encampment that had been cleared earlier, the school announced on X.

With final exams coming in the next few weeks, some campuses – including the Humboldt campus of California State Polytechni­c University – have closed and instructed students to complete their classes online.

The activists behind the campus protests, not all of them students, are calling for a ceasefire in Israel’s war with Hamas, and want colleges to sever ties with Israel.

Hamas militants staged an unpreceden­ted attack on Israel on October 7 that left around 1170 people dead, according to an AFP tally of Israeli official figures.

Palestinia­n militants also took roughly 250 people hostage. Israel estimates 129 remain in Gaza, including 34 the military says are dead.

Israel’s retaliator­y offensive has killed at least 34454 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry.

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