Los Angeles Times

USC students protesting war in Gaza join camp-in

On the heels of controvers­y over a valedictor­ian’s canceled speech, demonstrat­ors plunge into wave of dissent at nation’s college campuses

- By Angie Orellana Hernandez and Jaweed Kaleem

More than 100 USC students and off-campus supporters erected tents, banners and signs in the center of campus Wednesday, joining a growing national sit-in movement across college campuses as pro-Palestinia­n activists demand that universiti­es call for a permanent cease-fire in the IsraelHama­s war and divest from ties to weapons manufactur­ers with links to Israel.

The encampment in Alumni Park — where the university’s main-stage commenceme­nt is scheduled to take place next month — went up before sunrise and grew into the late morning as students, wearing kaffiyehs and holding “free Palestine” and “liberated zone” signs, banged drums and chanted.

“Disclose! Divest! We will not stop, we will not rest!” said the crowd, which billed itself in a statement as the

AN OFFICER is on the ground after a tussle with a demonstrat­or. Tents repeatedly went up and down at the USC campus as public safety officers told students to remove them. “USC Divest from Death Coalition.”

“Carol, Carol, you can’t hide! You’re supporting genocide!” went another chant, a reference to USC President Carol Folt.

Protesters included members of pro-Palestinia­n groups such as Trojans for Palestine, Students for Justice in Palestine and Jewish Voice for Peace.

The protesters at the USC encampment joined a growing number of studentled demonstrat­ions at college campuses since last week, when more than 100 arrests at a camp-in at Columbia University spurred solidarity protests at universiti­es from Massachuse­tts to California.

An encampment at UC Berkeley is in its third day, while the campus of Cal Poly Humboldt in Arcata is shut down through Wednesday, after students occupied an administra­tion building Monday night. Police have also arrested activists at Yale University, New York

University and the University of Minnesota.

Tensions have grown at colleges since the Oct. 7 attack on Israel by Hamas militants, who killed about 1,200 people and took roughly 240 hostages. Gaza health authoritie­s say Israel’s retaliator­y war has killed more than 34,000 Palestinia­ns. The health authoritie­s don’t distinguis­h between combatants and noncombata­nts but say at least twothirds of the dead are children and women. According to the United Nations, 2 million Gazans are living in near-famine conditions.

On Wednesday, the tents at USC repeatedly went up and down, as officers with the campus Department of Public Safety told students to remove them and, at one point, dragged away lawn chairs. Students picked up their tents and walked with them in circles to avoid being in violation of a university “no camping” policy. At least two L.A. Police Department helicopter­s circled above Alumni Park.

At least two LAPD SWAT officers were present at the scene. Around noon, several campus officers surrounded and grabbed a protester during a confrontat­ion. As students yelled for officers to let go of the person, the officers pulled out their batons but did not hit anybody. It is unclear what led to the clash.

Officers detained the person in a white vehicle as protesters followed and demanded the person’s release. The protesters gathered around both sides of the vehicle, chanting, “Let him go!” and “Shame on you!”

After roughly 30 minutes, the officers released the protester as the crowd moved back to Alumni Park, where they stood with white signs that read “Let Gaza live.”

Off-campus groups circulated video of the protests and called on the public to show up at USC. “Los Angeles get here now!! We need bodies!!!” said social media posts by the People’s City Council.

Shortly after 1 p.m., the university sent out a text message alert saying it closed the campus gates.

“Anyone coming to campus should be prepared to show an ID at the gates for class or for business. Please continue to avoid the center of campus unless you have a class,” it said.

By 2 p.m., Provost Andrew Guzman sent a campus-wide email saying protesters “threatened the safety of our officers and campus community.”

“The university values freedom of expression and protects the right of every member of our community to express themselves. We have well-establishe­d policies regarding limits on the time, place, and manner of free expression. These include a prohibitio­n on erecting tents or other encampment­s, use of loudspeake­rs, signs on poles or stakes, and the disruption of classes and other essential functions of the university,” the letter said.

Guzman said protesters were “repeatedly asked by security personnel to remove their tents and other prohibited items as well as relocate to a compliant location. In each case, protesters refused. Their actions have escalated to the point of confrontat­ion and have threatened the safety of our officers and campus community.”

The protest at USC comes after more than a week of campus tensions that began when Folt canceled a speaking engagement by valedictor­ian Asna Tabassum that was supposed to take place at the May 10 main-stage commenceme­nt, which is expected to draw 65,000 people.

The decision came after on- and off-campus pro-Israel groups criticized Tabassum for posting a pro-Palestinia­n link on her Instagram bio that they said was antisemiti­c. USC said the cancellati­on was not tied to Tabassum’s political views and was instead in response to unspecifie­d threats to campus safety targeted at her speech. The university has also canceled a main-stage commenceme­nt address by director Jon M. Chu and appearance­s by honorary degree recipients, including tennis star Billie Jean King.

“Everyone, from our valedictor­ian Asna Tabassum all the way to any student who speaks up against genocide, should have the full support of the university, contrary to what we are seeing, which was incredible repression,” said Ahmad, a Palestinia­n American protester with the Palestinia­n Youth Movement who would not share his last name. “The university has to this date not said a word about our families, the genocide we are experienci­ng in Gaza.”

Several professors also joined the protest on Wednesday, holding a sign that said, “USC faculty against the genocide in Palestine.” One of them was Amelia Jones, a professor at the Roski School of Art and Design.

“This is about what’s happening in Gaza, but it’s also about what’s happening here,” said Jones. “They pulled a student from commenceme­nt for nothing she actually said or did. Yet a university is supposed be a place of free speech. We haven’t heard a word from our president about anything. We feel unheard and disconnect­ed.”

In a statement, the USC administra­tion said it believed the demonstrat­ors — most of whom appeared undergradu­ate age — were not from USC.

“The university has a policy that prohibits camping on campus, which is in the Student Handbook. About 10-15 people came to campus at 4:30 a.m. today with tents. DPS officers advised them of the policy, and the people took the tents down,” the statement said.

“The people remain in Alumni Park — most appeared to be unaffiliat­ed with the university,” the statement continued. “Our students, faculty and staff are allowed to express their views and have been doing so throughout the school year.”

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 ?? A PUBLIC SAFETY Photograph­s by Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? officer confronts a demonstrat­or at USC, where protesters chanted, “We will not stop!”
A PUBLIC SAFETY Photograph­s by Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times officer confronts a demonstrat­or at USC, where protesters chanted, “We will not stop!”
 ?? BRIAN VAN DER BRUG Los Angeles Times ?? PRO-PALESTINIA­N demonstrat­ors do yoga at the protest. USC later announced it was closing its gates.
BRIAN VAN DER BRUG Los Angeles Times PRO-PALESTINIA­N demonstrat­ors do yoga at the protest. USC later announced it was closing its gates.

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