The Bakersfield Californian

Anti-war protesters dig in as some schools close

- BY MICHAEL CASEY AND JAMES POLLARD

NEW YORK — As students protesting the Israel-Hamas war at college campuses across U.S. dug in Saturday and dozens of demonstrat­ors were arrested, some universiti­es moved to shut down encampment­s after reports of antisemiti­c activity.

With the death toll mounting in the war in Gaza, protesters nationwide are demanding that schools cut financial ties to Israel and divest from companies they say are enabling the conflict. Some Jewish students say the protests have veered into antisemiti­sm and made them afraid to set foot on campus.

Early Saturday, police in riot gear cleared an encampment on the campus of Northeaste­rn University in Boston. Massachuse­tts State Police said about 102 protesters were arrested and will be charged with trespassin­g and disorderly conduct. Protesters said they were given about 15 minutes to disperse before being arrested.

As workers pulled down tents and bagged up the debris from the encampment, several dozen people across from the encampment chanted, “Let the Kids Go,” and slogans against the war in Gaza. They also booed as police cars passed and taunted the officers who stood guard over the encampment.

The school said in a statement that the demonstrat­ion, which began two days ago, had become “infiltrate­d by profession­al organizers” with no affiliatio­n to the school and antisemiti­c slurs, including “kill the Jews,” had been used.

“We cannot tolerate this kind of hate on our campus,” the statement posted on the social media platform X said.

The Huskies for a Free Palestine student group disputed the university’s account, saying in a statement that counterpro­testers were to blame for the slurs and no student protesters “repeated the disgusting hate speech.”

Students at the protest said a counterpro­tester attempted to instigate hate speech but insisted their event was peaceful and, like many across the country, was aimed at drawing attention to what they described as the “genocide” in Gaza and their university’s complicity in the war.

The president of nearby Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology put out a statement Saturday saying the encampment there had become a “potential magnet for disruptive outside protesters” and was taking hundreds of staff hours to keep safe.

“We have a responsibi­lity to the entire MIT community — and it is not possible to safely sustain this level of effort,” MIT President Sally Kornbluth said. “We are open to further discussion about the means of ending the encampment. But this particular form of expression needs to end soon.”

Indiana University campus officers and state police arrested 23 people Saturday at an encampment on the school’s Bloomingto­n campus. Tents and canopies had been erected Friday night at Dunn Meadow in violation of school policy, university police said in a release. Members of the group were detained after refusing to remove the structures, police said. Charges ranged from criminal trespass to resisting law enforcemen­t.

At the University of Pennsylvan­ia on Friday, interim President J. Larry Jameson called for an encampment of protesters on the west Philadelph­ia campus to be disbanded, saying it violates the university’s facilities policies, though about 40 tents remained in place Saturday morning.

The “harassing and intimidati­ng comments and actions” by some protesters violate the school’s open expression guidelines as well as state and federal law, Jameson said, and vandalism of a statue with antisemiti­c graffiti was “especially reprehensi­ble and will be investigat­ed as a hate crime.”

A faculty group said Saturday that it was “deeply disturbed” by the university president’s email, saying it included “unsubstant­iated allegation­s” that “have been disputed to us by faculty and students who have attended and observed the demonstrat­ion.”

 ?? CLIFF OWEN / AP ?? A George Washington University student, who declined to give her name, works on a school assignment on Saturday while joining other students in protesting the Israel-Hamas war at George Washington University in Washington.
CLIFF OWEN / AP A George Washington University student, who declined to give her name, works on a school assignment on Saturday while joining other students in protesting the Israel-Hamas war at George Washington University in Washington.

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