East Bay Times

Crackdowns at 3 protests lead to nearly 200 arrests

- By Anna Betts, Matthew Eadie and Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs

Nearly 200 protesters were arrested Saturday at Northeaste­rn University, Arizona State University and Indiana University, according to officials, as colleges across the country struggle to quell growing pro-Palestinia­n demonstrat­ions and encampment­s on campus.

More than 700 protesters have been arrested on U.S. campuses since April 18, when Columbia University had the New York Police Department clear a protest encampment there. In several cases, most of those who were arrested have been released.

At Northeaste­rn, in Boston, protesters had set up an encampment on the campus's Centennial Common this past week that drew more than 100 supporters. The administra­tion had asked the protesters to leave, but many students did not.

Around dawn Saturday, Massachuse­tts State Police officers arrived at the encampment and began to arrest protesters, putting them in ziptie handcuffs and taking several tents down. They said they had arrested 102 protesters. It was unclear how many of those arrested were students, but the university said students who showed their university IDs were being released.

A Northeaste­rn spokespers­on, Renata Nyul, said the demonstrat­ion had been “infiltrate­d by profession­al organizers” and that the “use of virulent antisemiti­c slurs, including `Kill the Jews,' crossed the line.”

Protesters denied both claims, and a video appeared to show that it was a pro-Israel counterpro­tester who used the phrase, as part of his criticism of the pro-Palestinia­n protesters' chants. In response to that video, Nyul stood by her initial comments, adding that “any suggestion that repulsive, antisemiti­c comments are sometimes acceptable depending on the context is reprehensi­ble.”

More than 2,500 miles away, at Arizona State, school police arrested 69 people early Saturday after they set up an unauthoriz­ed encampment, which was in violation of university policy, school officials said.

The school said that the protesters had created an encampment and that the group was instructed multiple times to disperse.

“While the university will continue to be an environmen­t that embraces freedom of speech, ASU's first priority is to create a safe and secure environmen­t that supports teaching and learning,” school officials said in a statement.

At Indiana University Bloomingto­n, where university police had arrested 33 people at an encampment this past week, campus and state police arrested 23 more protesters Saturday. Officials said a group had “erected numerous tents and canopies on Friday night with the stated intention to occupy the university space indefinite­ly.”

 ?? SOPHIE PARK — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Northeaste­rn University police escort a pro-Palestinia­n demonstrat­or from the encampment on the school's campus in Boston, Mass., on Saturday. Hundreds of protesters have been arrested across the country.
SOPHIE PARK — THE NEW YORK TIMES Northeaste­rn University police escort a pro-Palestinia­n demonstrat­or from the encampment on the school's campus in Boston, Mass., on Saturday. Hundreds of protesters have been arrested across the country.

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