Thursday, May 02, 2024

UCLA criticised for failure to stop raid on pro-Palestinian encampment at campus

Some pro-Palestinian demonstrators fought back, and skirmishes continued for hours before outside law enforcement agencies were called to intervene

AP/PTI
 Los Angeles 
Published 03.05.24, 04:59 AM


University of California, Los AngelesFile image

Administrators and campus police at UCLA faced intense criticism Wednesday for failing to act quickly to stop an attack on a pro-Palestinian encampment on campus by counter-demonstrators who threw traffic cones and chairs, released pepper spray and tore down barriers.

Some pro-Palestinian demonstrators fought back, and skirmishes continued for hours before outside law enforcement agencies were called to intervene.

No one was arrested, and at least 15 protesters suffered injuries in the confrontation, part of a recent spate of escalating violence that’s occurring on some college campuses nationally over the Israel-Hamas war.

“The community needs to feel the police are protecting them, not enabling others to harm them,” Rebecca Husaini, chief of staff for the Muslim Public Affairs Council, said in a news conference on the Los Angeles campus later on Wednesday, where some Muslim students detailed the overnight events

The call for more police intervention at UCLA stood in stark contrast to other campuses across the US, where officers’ actions were strongly condemned. At the University of Wisconsin in Madison, activists clashed with police officers.

The chaotic scenes unfolded early on Wednesday after the police burst into a building occupied by anti-war protesters at Columbia University on Tuesday night.

Pro-Israel supporters attack pro-Palestinian encampment at University of California


ByNichola Groom and Maria Tsvetkova
Updated May 2, 2024 — 

KEY POINTS
Police deployed after UCLA pro-Palestinian encampment attacked.

UCLA Chancellor said “a group of instigators” came on campus to attack the encampment.
At New York’s Columbia University and nearby City College, some 300 people were arrested.

Los Angeles: Mounting tensions on US campuses boiled over on Wednesday when pro-Israel supporters attacked an encampment of pro-Palestinian protesters at the University of California, Los Angeles hours after police arrested activists who occupied a building at Columbia University and flattened a tent city on its campus.

Eyewitness videos from UCLA, verified by Reuters, showed people wielding sticks and poles to hammer on wooden boards being used as makeshift barricades to protect the pro-Palestinian protesters before police were called to the campus.

Police arrived donning riot gear and warning over loudspeakers that anyone who refused to leave faced arrest.


Demonstrators clash at a pro-Palestinian encampment at UCLA early Wednesday in Los Angeles. CREDIT:AP

On the other side of the country, scores of New York City police officers in helmets and armour arrested pro-Palestinian demonstrators occupying an academic building at Columbia University.

Undergraduate students watching the extraordinary scene, many jeering at the police, fled into nearby buildings on the command of officers as police also cleared out a nearby protest encampment that had inspired similar protests at campuses across the country and abroad.

Police arrested about 300 people at Columbia and City College of New York, Mayor Eric Adams said. Many were charged with trespassing and criminal mischief.

The clashes at UCLA and in New York are part of the biggest outpouring of US student activism since the anti-racism rallies and marches of 2020.

The protests follow the October 7 attack on southern Israel by Hamas militants from the Gaza Strip and the ensuing Israeli offensive on the Palestinian enclave.

Students have rallied or set up encampments at dozens of colleges, expressing opposition to Israel’s war in Gaza and demanding schools divest from companies that support the Israeli government. Many of the schools have called in police to quell the protests.

With the presidential election coming in November, Republican legislators have accused some university administrators of ignoring antisemitic rhetoric and harassment, and some have demanded Columbia’s president Minouche Shafik resign.

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The pro-Palestine wave tearing some of America’s most prestigious universities apart

Many protesters, some of whom are Jewish, reject allegations of antisemitism. Shafik has said the protests have brought rancour to life at Columbia, while also blaming some episodes of harassment and hostile rhetoric on outsiders drawn to the busy Manhattan streets surrounding the campus.

US President Joe Biden, who has angered many protesters by funding and arming Israel, plans to give a speech on antisemitism next week at a Holocaust memorial event.

“Americans have the right to peacefully protest,” Karine Jean-Pierre, the White House spokesperson, told reporters. “Forcibly taking over a building is not peaceful.”
UCLA protesters report violent attacks

Before the clashes in Los Angeles, UCLA officials declared that an encampment on its campus was unlawful, violated university policy and included people unaffiliated with the campus.


Play video
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Pro-Palestinian demonstrators and police clash at US campuses

Violence erupts at US university campuses as police and pro-Palestinian protesters clash.

Afterwards, counter-demonstrators – many of them masked and some apparently older than most students – can be seen in videos throwing objects and trying to smash or pull down the wooden and steel barriers erected to shield the encampment.

Some screamed pro-Jewish comments as pro-Palestinian protesters tried to fight them off.

“I just didn’t think they would ever get to this,” said Kaia Shah, a pro-Palestinian protester and researcher at UCLA, “where our protest is met by counter-protesters who are violently hurting us, inflicting pain on us, when we are not doing anything to them.”

Demonstrators on both sides used pepper spray, and fights broke out. Pro-Palestinian demonstrators said the counter-protesters threw fireworks at them and beat them with bats and sticks.


Demonstrators clash at a pro-Palestinian encampment at UCLA on Wednesday.
CREDIT:AP

Benjamin Kersten, a UCLA graduate student and member of the pro-Palestinian group Jewish Voice for Peace, called it “a devastating night of violence”.

“The encampment would be a peaceful effort were it not for the continuous presence of counter-protesters and agitators,” he wrote in a text message.

“While Congress holds more hearings on whether Jewish students feel safe enough on campuses, Jewish students are among those withstanding attacks from Zionist protesters,” he said in reference to recent sessions held by a Republican-led House of Representatives committee.
Sympathy for the injured

UCLA Chancellor Gene Block said in a statement on Wednesday (US time) that “a group of instigators” came on campus to “forcefully attack” the pro-Palestinian encampment, prompting the school to ask for assistance from outside law enforcement agencies.

“However one feels about the encampment, this attack on our students, faculty and community members was utterly unacceptable,” Block said.

“It has shaken our campus to its core and — adding to other abhorrent incidents that we have witnessed and that have circulated on social media over the past several days — further damaged our community’s sense of security.”

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Inside the growing protest tent cities of Melbourne and Monash universities

Block offered his sympathy to those who were injured and anyone who feels unsafe on campus.

He promised the university will conduct a thorough investigation that he said may lead to arrests, expulsions and dismissals. In addition, Block said the administration is examining its own security response.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass also called for an investigation into the events on UCLA’s campus.

“Those involved in launching fireworks at other people, spraying chemicals and physically assaulting others will be found, arrested, and prosecuted, as well as anyone involved in any form of violence or lawlessness,” she said.

Police said UCLA had called them to restore order and maintain public safety “due to multiple acts of violence” within the encampment.

Broadcast footage later showed police clearing a central quad beside the encampment and erecting a metal crowd control barrier in front of it.

The atmosphere was calmer later on Wednesday. Hundreds of police officers were on campus and lining its perimeter. It was unclear how many arrests were made or the number of people injured.

Columbia demonstrators arrested

Columbia’s Shafik said she had asked police to stay on campus until at least May 17, two days after graduation, and the main campus, where student dorms are located, remained under lockdown on Wednesday. The school said the rest of the semester would be conducted remotely, including final exams, some of which may be delayed.

Ararat Sekeryan, a sixth-year Slavic languages doctoral student from Istanbul, described being pushed out of the lawn encampment and described the calling of police as dangerous.

“I myself felt attacked,” he said. “They were so afraid of this peaceful movement that they had to send more than a thousand, maybe hundreds of police to campus.”

Ben Solomon, a 22-year-old Jewish student at Columbia, said he welcomed the move to clear what he called a “mob” from the occupied building and encampment.

“I’m glad to see universities took decisive action,” he said, as more than 100 students and professors gathered in a street adjoining the campus to protest the school’s decision to call the police.

Shafik said the events filled her “with deep sadness”.

“I am sorry we reached this point,” she wrote in an email to the university community on Wednesday, promising efforts to reunite a frayed campus.

The university earlier warned that students taking part in the occupation faced academic expulsion.

Reuters, AP

Jewish UCLA students face down the campus protests: 'The Jewish people need a voice'

UCLA undergrad Eli Tsives says students who support Palestinians call for intifadas tied to genocide, but urges the Jewish community not to be intimidated; Elinor was assaulted by protesters
YNET, JERUSALEM

Eli Tsives, 19, a student majoring in theater and film at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), tried to attend a class on campus this week but was blocked from entering the building by several students wrapped in keffiyehs and wearing face masks. Tsives, who was wearing a Star of David necklace, showed his student ID and asked to be allowed to pass, but they stood firm and blocked his path.

Tsives, in his first year at the university, says he feels increasingly unsafe on campus. He noted that the administration is failing to protect Jewish students who face verbal and physical hate incidents daily. Hundreds of pro-Palestinian anti-Israel student protesters set up camp on Bruin Walk, painting a large Star of David with the message: "Stay Away."





"They equate the Star of David with a swastika and defile our beautiful campus with graffiti," Tsives said. Tsives uploaded a video to Instagram, which quickly went viral, boosting his follower count from 1,000 to 20,000 overnight. However, this publicity comes at a cost.
"They now know where I live. My family and others are helping me with personal security because things spiraled out of control," he said.
Tsives complained to the administration but received the baffling response that they had no intention of removing the "peaceful protesters."


Pro-Israel and Pro-Palestinian protests
(Photo: Michael Marom)

“I have a very simple response to that: Shame on them. These are not peaceful protesters. They are breaking the law, calling for intifadas, which entail the genocide of Jews. The administration is well within their legal right to call upon UCPD [University of California Police Department] or LAPD to come and remove and arrest all the protestors. The fact that they are not doing it shows how scared they are of the mob,” he said.
Despite it all, Tsives says that he doesn't regret his decision to study at UCLA.

“I do not regret a single second of it,” he said. “The Jewish people, especially Jewish students, need a voice. They need someone to demonstrate that there’s no reason to fear these bullies, that we cannot yield to their intimidation. This is my voice, and if my face becomes the face of that voice, so be it. I view this as a blessing in disguise. I have people walking up to me and thanking me saying that my courage encouraging them to also be courageous and speak up. I hope to see the day when Jewish students can walk on campus with a Star of David without fear.

On Sunday, thousands of pro-Israel protesters gathered at UCLA, waving flags of Israel and the U.S. in solidarity with Jewish students. They chanted and held up their flags while a few meters away, separated by a barricade, stood the opposing protesters.

Ruth Sonbolian was there with her children when her 20-year-old daughter was brutally attacked. "My younger daughter dropped her flag, and once they noticed it, they swarmed into our section and began stomping on it. When my older daughter Elinor bent down to retrieve it, they started kicking the flag and her head,” Sonbolian said.

Distraught, she rushed to help her daughter but was forcefully pushed back. I fell to the ground and witnessed my daughter being thrown into the air and crashing onto the asphalt. My son helped her up. She briefly lost consciousness. We called the police and an ambulance, but they refused to come,” she said.

Sonbolian explained that the police informed her they couldn't enter the campus and instructed her to get her daughter out in order to receive assistance. “With the help of Hatzalah, we took her out, and she was admitted to the emergency room at UCLA. She couldn’t sleep all night due to pain and trauma. When I questioned the LAPD about their inaction, they callously stated that they didn’t want to provoke riots or violence in the town. They seemed indifferent to the potential loss of Jewish lives in the process,” she said.


Student protestors watched by snipers as police enter pro-Palestine camps

Sarah Hooper
Published May 2, 2024
Barricades have been made of ply wood and miscellaneous materials (Picture: Reuters)

A second night of violence has been unleashed on the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) as police have begun to be descend on a pro-Palestine encampment.

Students have been fortifying their barricades in preparation for another night of conflict as they attempt to hold their ground as sign of protest.

Those within the walls of the encampment are wearing helmets, goggles and prepping medical aide – with student doctors reportedly on site to help.

Los Angeles Police have reportedly made a dispersal announcement to protestors in the encampment – thought to be in the hundreds. ‘You risk serious injury,’ one announcement reportedly said.



Those within the walls of the encampment were heard chanting ‘We’re not leaving!’ and ‘Shame on you LAPD’ in response to the dispersal order, which has threatened those inside with arrest.

Earlier reports appeared to show snipers on surrounding buildings near the encampment – identified by Metro.co.uk as being in Royce Hall, next to the square where protestors are gathered.

The protests on UCLA campus have been going on for weeks (Picture: Reuters)
Security footage appears to show LAPD snipers taking positions on roofs (Picture: X)
Students have been (Picture: Reuters)

A California Highway Patrol helicopter is currently circling the campus, from which announcements are being made.

The Daily Bruin, UCLA’s student paper, is reporting live from the ground and said earlier: ‘A medic in the encampment said LAPD told medical staff in the area to be prepared by 1 a.m.’

Yesterday, violent scenes began unfolding at UCLA – with footage showing a protestor being hit by a wooden pallet someone threw at him.


More than 1,000 protesters have been arrested over the last two weeks on university campuses in Texas, Utah, Virginia, North Carolina, New Mexico, Connecticut, Louisiana, California and New Jersey.

The reasons behind the protest vary slightly, but overall agree that the US should end military support to Israel.

Some university students, such as those at Columbia, are demanding their schools sever any financial ties to Israel and other companies involved directly in the conflict.


Hundreds of police file onto UCLA near pro-Palestinian protest camp, a day after violent clashes

02 May 2024 
BY LISA RICHWINE AND OMAR YOUNIS

Law enforcement officers stand guard in front of protesters supporting Palestinians in Gaza, at an encampment at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), as the conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas continues, in Los Angeles, California, US, May 1, 2024.
Image: REUTERS/Aude Guerrucci

Hundreds of helmeted police descended onto the campus of the University of California at Los Angeles after darkness fell on Wednesday, preparing to clear out a pro-Palestinian protest camp attacked the previous night by pro-Israel supporters.

The impending crackdown at UCLA is the latest flashpoint for mounting tensions on US college campuses where protests over Israel's conduct of the war in Gaza have led to student clashes with each other, school administrators and law enforcement.

Starting around sunset, officers in tactical gear began filing onto the UCLA campus adjacent to a complex of tents occupied by throngs of demonstrators. Some protesters were seen donning hard hats, goggles and respirator masks in anticipation of the raid a day after the university declared the encampment unlawful.

Hundreds of other pro-Palestinian activists who assembled outside the tent city jeered police with shouts of “Shame on you,” some banging on drums and waving Palestinian flags, as officers marched onto the campus grounds.

The demonstrators, many wearing the traditional Palestinian keffiyeh scarves, also chanted, “Disclose, divest, we will not stop. We will not rest,” and “Free free Palestine.”

A much smaller group of demonstrators waving Israeli flags urged on the police to shut down the encampment, yelling, “Hey hey, ho-ho, the occupation has got to go.”

But police officers stood by on the periphery of the tents for hours — presumably to let crowds of onlookers thin out — awaiting word from commanders to remove barricades and march into the encampment to arrest occupants who refused to leave.

Prior to moving in, police with a loudspeaker urged the demonstrators to clear the protest area in a grassy plaza between the landmark twin-tower auditorium Royce Hall and the main undergraduate library.

UCLA had cancelled classes for the day following a violent clash between the encampment's occupants and a group of masked counter-demonstrators who mounted a surprise assault late Tuesday night on the tent city.

The occupants of the outdoor protest camp, set up last week, had remained otherwise peaceful before the melee, in which both sides traded blows and doused each other with pepper spray.

Members of the pro-Palestinian group said fireworks were thrown at them and they were beaten with bats and sticks. University officials blamed the disturbance on “instigators” and vowed an investigation.

The confrontation went on for two or three hours into early Wednesday morning before police restored order. A spokesperson for California Governor Gavin Newsom later criticised the “limited and delayed campus law enforcement response” to the unrest as “unacceptable.”

As the much-expanded police force entered the campus on Wednesday night to clear the encampment, some of the protesters were heard yelling at them, “Where were you yesterday?”

UCLA officials said the campus operations would resume on a limited basis on Thursday and Friday.

Wednesday night's police operation came a day after police in New York City arrested pro-Palestinian activists who occupied a building at Columbia University and removed a tent city from the campus of the Ivy League school.

Police arrested a total of about 300 people at Columbia and City College of New York, Mayor Eric Adams said. Many of those arrested were charged with trespassing and criminal mischief.

The clashes at UCLA and in New York were part of the biggest outpouring of US student activism since the antiracism rallies and marches of 2020.

Ninety pro-Palestinian demonstrators — students and outsiders — were arrested at Dartmouth University in New Hampshire on Wednesday, the Hanover Police Department said. They were charged with criminal trespass and resisting arrest.

The protests follow the Oct. 7 attack on southern Israel by Hamas militants from the Gaza Strip and the ensuing Israeli offensive on the Palestinian enclave.

Students have rallied or set up tent encampments at dozens of schools across the US in recent days, calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and demanding schools divest from companies that support Israel's government. Many of the schools have called in police to quell the protests.

The demonstrations across the country have been met with counter-protesters accusing them of fomenting anti-Jewish hatred. The pro-Palestinian side, including Jews opposed to Israeli actions in Gaza, say they are being unfairly branded as antisemitic for criticising Israel's government and expressing support for human rights.

The issue has taken on political overtones in the run-up to the US presidential election in November, with Republicans accusing some university administrators of turning a blind eye to antisemitic rhetoric and harassment.


Police begin removing barricades at a pro-Palestinian demonstrators' encampment at UCLA


By KRYSTA FAURIA, ETHAN SWOPE, JAKE OFFENHARTZ and JOSEPH B. FREDERICK,
Associated Press
May 2, 2024 

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Police removed barricades and began dismantling a pro-Palestinian demonstrators’ fortified encampment early Thursday at the UCLA campus after hundreds of protesters defied police orders to leave, about 24 hours after counter-protesters attacked a tent encampment on the campus.

The law enforcement effort comes after officers spent hours threatening arrests over loud speakers if people did not disperse. Hundreds of people had gathered on campus, both inside a barricaded tent encampment and outside of it in support.

The sound of flash bangs could be heard as police moved in.

Police methodically ripped apart the encampment’s barricade of plywood, pallets, metal fences and trash dumpsters and made an opening toward dozens of tents of demonstrators. Police also began to pull down canopies and tents.

Demonstrators were holding umbrellas like shields as they faced off with dozens of officers. Some of the protesters warned their fellow demonstrators to be ready with water in case police release tear gas or other irritant.

The police action occurred a night after the UCLA administration and campus police waited hours to stop the counter-protesters’ attack. The delay drew condemnation from Muslim students and California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

Demonstrators rebuilt the makeshift barriers around their tents on Wednesday aftenoon while state and campus police watched.

Tent encampments of protesters calling on universities to stop doing business with Israel or companies they say support the war in Gaza have spread across campuses nationwide in a student movement unlike any other this century. The ensuing police crackdowns echoed actions decades ago against a much larger protest movement protesting the Vietnam War.

The tense standoff at UCLA came one night after violence instigated by counter-protesters erupted in the same place.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Hundreds of pro-Palestinian protesters Thursday remained behind barricades on the UCLA campus despite police orders to leave as officers were poised to move in on their fortified encampment that was ringed by an even larger crowd, including supporters who locked arms and curious onlookers.

Shortly before 2 a.m., police briefly made their way into the perimeter of the encampment only to retreat after being outnumbered by scores of protesters who yelled “shame on you!” Some in the crowd tossed water bottles and other objects as dozens of officers ran back.

Later the crowd chanted “we're not leaving. You don't scare us.”

Armed with batons and in full riot gear, California Highway Patrol officers returned about an hour later and stood within feet of scores of protesters, who threw objects and yelled. More than 100 protesters moved from the stairs leading down from the encampment to block a side entrance to the encampment where police were advancing.

Law enforcement made a massive display, sending in columns of officers who were closing in on all sides of the encampment. Members of the crowd flashed lights in the officers faces and screamed insults at them.

The huge numbers of police began arriving late in the afternoon Wednesday and issued the dispersal order. Empty buses were parked near the University of California, Los Angeles, to take away protesters who don't comply with the order.

Tent encampments of protesters calling on universities to stop doing business with Israel or companies they say support the war in Gaza have spread across campuses nationwide in a student movement unlike any other this century. The ensuing police crackdowns echoed actions decades ago against a much larger protest movement protesting the Vietnam War.

The tense standoff at UCLA came one night after violence instigated by counter-protesters erupted in the same place.

The law enforcement presence and continued warnings stood in contrast to the scene that unfolded the night before, when counter-demonstrators attacked the pro-Palestinian encampment, throwing traffic cones, releasing pepper spray and tearing down barriers. Fighting continued for several hours before police stepped in, though no arrests were made. At least 15 protesters suffered injuries, and the tepid response by authorities drew criticism from political leaders as well as Muslim students and advocacy groups.

By Wednesday afternoon a small city sprang up inside the reenforced encampment, now full of hundreds of people and tents on the campus quad. Some protesters said Muslim prayers as the sun set over the campus, while others chanted “we’re not leaving” or passed out goggles and surgical masks. They wore helmets and headscarves, and discussed the best ways to handle pepper spray or tear gas as someone sang over a megaphone.

A few constructed homemade shields out of plywood in case they clashed with police forming skirmish lines elsewhere on the campus. “For rubber bullets, who wants a shield?" a protester called out.

Outside the encampment, a crowd of students, alumni and neighbors gathered on campus steps, joining in pro-Palestinian chants. A group of students holding signs and wearing T-shirts in support of Israel and Jewish people demonstrated nearby.

The crowd continued to grow as the night wore on as more and more officers poured onto campus.

Ray Wiliani, who lives nearby, said he came to UCLA on Wednesday evening to support the pro-Palestinian demonstrators.

“We need to take a stand for it,” he said. “Enough is enough.”

Elsewhere, police in New Hampshire said they made 90 arrests and took down tents at Dartmouth College and officers in Oregon came onto the campus at Portland State University as school officials sought to end the occupation of the library that started Monday.

The chaotic scenes at UCLA came after New York police burst into a building occupied by anti-war protesters at Columbia University on Tuesday night, breaking up a demonstration that had paralyzed the school.

An Associated Press tally counted at least 38 times since April 18 where arrests were made at campus protests across the U.S. More than 1,600 people have been arrested at 30 schools.

UCLA Chancellor Gene Block said in a statement that “a group of instigators” perpetrated the previous night's attack, but he did not provide details about the crowd or why the administration and school police did not act sooner.

“However one feels about the encampment, this attack on our students, faculty and community members was utterly unacceptable,” he said. “It has shaken our campus to its core.”

Block promised a review of the night's events after California Gov. Gavin Newsom denounced the delays.

The head of the University of California system, Michael Drake, ordered an “independent review of the university’s planning, its actions and the response by law enforcement.”

“The community needs to feel the police are protecting them, not enabling others to harm them,” Rebecca Husaini, chief of staff for the Muslim Public Affairs Council, said in a news conference on the Los Angeles campus Wednesday.

Speakers disputed the university’s account that 15 people were injured and one hospitalized, saying the number of people taken to the hospital was higher. One student described needing to go to the hospital after being hit in the head by an object wielded by counter-protesters.

Several students who spoke during the news conference said they had to rely on each other, not the police, for support as they were attacked, and that many in the pro-Palestinian encampment remained peaceful and did not engage with counter-protesters. UCLA canceled classes Wednesday.

In Madison, a scrum broke out early Wednesday after police with shields removed all but one tent and shoved protesters. Four officers were injured, including a state trooper who was hit in the head with a skateboard, authorities said. Four were charged with battering law enforcement.

This is all playing out in an election year in the U.S., raising questions about whether young voters — who are critical for Democrats — will back President Joe Biden's reelection effort, given his staunch support of Israel.

In rare instances, university officials and protest leaders struck agreements to restrict the disruption to campus life and upcoming commencement ceremonies.

At Brown University in Rhode Island, administrators agreed to consider a vote to divest from Israel in October — apparently the first U.S. college to agree to such a demand.

The nationwide campus demonstrations began at Columbia on April 17 to protest Israel’s offensive in Gaza, which followed Hamas launching a deadly attack on southern Israel on Oct. 7. Militants killed about 1,200 people, most of them civilians, and took roughly 250 hostages. Vowing to stamp out Hamas, Israel has killed more than 34,000 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, according to the Health Ministry there.

Israel and its supporters have branded the university protests antisemitic, while Israel’s critics say it uses those allegations to silence opposition. Although some protesters have been caught on camera making antisemitic remarks or violent threats, organizers of the protests, some of whom are Jewish, say it is a peaceful movement aimed at defending Palestinian rights and protesting the war.

Meanwhile, protest encampments elsewhere were cleared by the police, resulting in arrests, or closed up voluntarily at schools across the U.S., including The City College of New York, Fordham University in New York, Portland State in Oregon, Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff, Arizona and Tulane University in New Orleans.


___


Offenhartz and Frederick reported from New York. Associated Press journalists around the country contributed to this report, including John Antczak, Christopher L. Keller, Lisa Baumann, Cedar Attanasio, Jonathan Mattise, Stefanie Dazio, Jae C. Hong, Colleen Long, Karen Matthews, Sarah Brumfield, Carolyn Thompson, Philip Marcelo, Corey Williams and Felicia Fonseca.


In Pictures

UCLA campus standoff as police order pro-Palestinian protesters to leave

Hundreds of police in riot gear mass on US campus as students threatened with arrest.


Supporters of the pro-Palestinian protesters sit on stairs leading to an encampment as students demonstrate on the campus of the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). [Etienne Laurent/AFP]
Published On 2 May 20242 May 2024



Police in riot gear massed on the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) campus and ordered a large group of pro-Palestinian demonstrators inside an encampment to leave the area or face arrest after violence instigated by pro-Israel counter-protesters.

The barricaded encampment was full of hundreds of people and tents. Some protesters prayed as the sun set over the campus, while others chanted “we’re not leaving” or passed out goggles and surgical masks. They wore helmets and headscarves and discussed the best ways to handle pepper spray or tear gas as someone sang over a megaphone.

A few made homemade shields out of plywood in case they clashed with police forming skirmish lines elsewhere on the campus. “For rubber bullets, who wants a shield?” a protester called out.

Meanwhile, a large crowd of students, alumni and neighbours gathered on campus steps outside the tents, sitting as they listened and applauded various speakers and joined in pro-Palestinian chants. A small group of students holding signs and wearing T-shirts in support of Israel and Jewish people demonstrated nearby.

The law enforcement presence and continued warnings stood in contrast to the scene that unfolded the night before, when counter-demonstrators attacked the pro-Palestinian encampment, throwing traffic cones, releasing pepper spray and tearing down barriers. Fighting continued for several hours before police stepped in, though no arrests were made. The tepid response from the authorities drew criticism from political leaders as well as Muslim students and advocacy groups.

UCLA Chancellor Gene Block said in a statement that “a group of instigators” perpetrated the previous night’s attack, but he did not provide details about the crowd or why the administration and school police did not act sooner.

Police officers get into position as pro-Palestinian students and activists demonstrate on the UCLA campus. 
A person inside the UCLA encampment waves a Palestinian flag. 
A large crowd of students, alumni and neighbours gathered on campus steps outside the tents, applauding various speakers and joining in pro-Palestinian chants. 
Banners and signs are seen on Royce Hall inside the UCLA encampment. [Etienne Laurent/AFP]
Pro-Palestinian students and activists standing in the UCLA encampment face police. 
Police officers are deployed near the pro-Palestinian protest encampment. 

Protesters work to rebuild the barricade surrounding their encampment. 
Police officers depolyed at the protest encampment on the UCLA campus. Lines of armed police with batons and wooden clubs were seen patrolling sections of the campus in large numbers.
A security guard monitors the pro-Palestinian protest encampment. 
Protesters calling on universities to stop doing business with Israel or companies they say support the war in Gaza have spread on campuses across the United States, as well as in other parts of the world. 

PHOTOS  Etienne Laurent/AFP


Pro-Palestinian campus protests continue in Bay Area, nationwide

By Pete Suratos • 

Pro-Palestinian demonstrations continued at universities nationwide Wednesday as law enforcement agencies tried to clear out the encampments. Pete Suratos reports.

Pro-Palestinian demonstrations continued at universities nationwide Wednesday as law enforcement agencies tried to clear out the encampments.

In the Bay Area, there were negotiations that reportedly began between pro-Palestinian encampment organizers and UC Berkeley leaders on Wednesday.

According to the Daily Californian, there was a discussion that took place between a group of organizers with the “Free Palestine Encampment” and university leaders, including chancellor Carol Christ, regarding the campus’ complete divestment from any ties to the war in Gaza.

A UC Berkeley spokesperson told NBC Bay Area Wednesday night that the university is not commenting on whether or not a discussion took place between encampment organizers and university leaders.

The reported meeting comes as police try to clear out the encampments at universities across the country.


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In Los Angeles, tensions mounted at UCLA Wednesday night.

The Los Angeles Police Department issued a dispersal order for the growing student-led encampment on the UCLA campus in support of Palestinians during the ongoing war in Gaza. The incident comes one day after fights broke out between pro-Palestinian demonstrators and counter protestors.

At Columbia University in New York, more than 100 people were arrested Tuesday night, including demonstrators occupying a campus building. On Wednesday, demonstrators were out in full force outside of that same building, with a projector displaying phrases on the building in support of Palestinians.

Pete Suratos has more in the video above.


Students start wave of protests over Gaza at UK universities after US crackdown

Demonstrations had been scheduled to take place in at least six universities as war rages on in Gaza

Matt Mathers,Emma Guinness
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Students joined pro-Palestine protests and encampments at universities in the UK on Wednesday following violent demonstrations at campuses in the US.

Demonstrations took place at several universities including Sheffield, Bristol, Leeds and Newcastle, and others were expected to join them.


The protests came following violent clashes on the University of California campus between pro-Palestinian protesters and a group of counter-demonstrators, hours after police stormed Columbia University and arrested dozens of students.

At Goldsmiths University in south London, students have been occupying buildings - including the library - for weeks.

On Tuesday, video shared online showed students holding a rally in a courtyard at the university and chanting “no justice, no peace, if you don’t give us justice then you don’t get no peace”.

Students also occupied the library and demanded to meet with senior management to discuss their protests and the war in Gaza.

“I think a lot of people are really inspired by what’s going on in the US,” Samira, a 24-year-old sociology student and member of Goldsmiths For Palestine, told The Independent.

Students hold a pro-Palestine rally at Goldsmiths ( @goldsmithsforpalestine)

“We feel a duty as students to come out and protest when you’re seeing like, fellow students in the US…smashed up by riots, and all of that, but, yeah…I think people are really inspired.”


Students at the University of Bristol, University of Leeds, and Newcastle University set up tents in demonstrations on Wednesday.

Bristol students said they staged the action “in protest of the university’s complicity in Israel’s genocide of Palestinians,” while Apartheid Off Campus Newcastle said its demonstration was to “highlight the institution’s investment strategy and its complicity in the Israeli military’s war crimes in Gaza and the West Bank.”


Protests were due to take place in at least six universities (Bristol Student Occupation for a Free PalestineApartheid Off Campus Newcastle/)

In the US, police arrested some 35 people at California State Polytechnic University, Humbold yesterday after pro-Palestinian protesters barricaded themselves inside the dean’s office.

The students had been occupying Siemens Hall since 22 April.

Overnight, hundreds of police officers dressed in riot gear stormed Columbia, where campus protesters had occupied Hamilton Hall since Monday.

They later used a SWAT ramp, attached to the roof of a truck, to enter the barricaded building and 109 people were arrested.

A further 173 arrests were made at the City College of New York, where demonstrations have also taken place.

Pro-Palestine protests take over UK universities just days after police stormed US campuses


By James Saunder
GB NEWS
Published: 02/05/2024 - 

Warwick University demonstrators called for people to 'rise up in unison with fellow students all over the world, from Columbia, NYC, to Paris, to Sydney'

Pro-Palestine student protesters have begun establishing camps at UK universities in an attempt to cause the same kind of sit-in disruption seen at American institutions over the last few days and weeks.

Students at top English universities - Bristol, Leeds, Manchester, Newcastle and Sheffield - have set up tents and marquees, and have hoisted anti-Israel banners and Palestinian flags on buildings and in open spaces.

One of the encampments at a piazza at Warwick University has been in place for almost a week, with student campaign groups claiming Warwick is "continu[ing] to reject our demands to cut ties with genocide", and professing to "rise up in unison with fellow students all over the world, from Columbia, NYC, to Paris, to Sydney".

Many of the demonstrations have called for their universities to cut financial ties with Israel or Israeli companies in light of the country's ongoing military response in Palestine to the October 7 Hamas attacks.

Protesters at Goldsmiths, University of London, have staged sit-ins, while demonstrators at Warwick have established a week-long camp at a campus piazza

At Manchester, protests starting on May 1 have elicited official university responses; while the institution's Chief Operating Officer, Patrick Hackett, said it was "incredibly important that people are able to exercise free speech within the law", he urged protesters not to block access to study and work spaces with exams looming.

While at Goldsmiths, University of London, students established camps overnight at the university library and stuck banners to windows stating "from the river to the sea" and "shut it down for Palestine", claiming they would not leave "until senior management come to face us".

Yesterday's demonstrations followed large-scale "May Day" action across the UK which saw protesters blockade BAE Systems facilities and a government department over their ties to UK arms exports to Israel.

And the university encampments and sit-ins directly mirror those seen at institutions on the other side of the Atlantic; this week, activists camping out at UCLA in Los Angeles, Northeastern University in Boston, and Columbia University in New York have clashed with campus authorities and city police alike.


Australian university students are camping out in support of Gaza. Here’s what you need to know


Daisy Dumas
The Guardian
Tue, 30 April 2024 

The pro-Palestinian student protesters who set up the camp at the University of Sydney want disclosure of and divestment from all university activities that support Israel, as well as a ceasefire and the end of government ties to Israel.
Photograph: Jessica Hromas/The Guardian

Protests in support of Gaza have spread to about 50 US universities and are now in four Australian universities, with students committed to permanently occupying university land until their demands for divestment are met.

What are the Gaza encampment protests?

Columbia University in New York has become the centre of a spate of pro-Palestinian camps in universities across the US. The camps are an extension of protests that have been taking place on campuses since 7 October, with students demanding a ceasefire in Gaza and a complete divestment of university ties to Israel.

Hundreds of US university protesters have been arrested. On Monday Columbia protesters rejected an ultimatum to disband the camp, with university management suspending students in response.

The US demonstrations have triggered allegations of antisemitism amid reports by Jewish students that they have been subjected to threats and slurs. Protest activists in the US, in response, have asserted that the charges of antisemitism have been ramped up in an effort to silence criticism of Israel.

When did the movement start in Australia?


University of Sydney students set up a camp last Tuesday. The camp has consistently had more than 40 and up to about 60 campers each night, with a rally last Wednesday drawing about 200 people. The movement has since spread – the University of Melbourne joined on Thursday, while camps were established on Monday at the University of Queensland and the Australian National University in Canberra. A camp is expected to be set up at Curtin University in Perth on Wednesday. Protesters say the camps will remain until their demands are met.

The movement’s Australian branches have been applauded by US protesters, including those from the New School in New York and from New York University.

Who is protesting?

Students, staff and the broader pro-Palestinian community. One of those is Shovan Bhattarai, 25, who is studying history and is an organiser of the camp at the University of Sydney.

“We see ourselves as part of this global wave,” she said. Bhattarai said genocide and the indiscriminate killing of people was happening, and claimed that was backed by the Australian government and Sydney University.

The camp is serving as a hub for other Sydney universities that do not have their own encampments. A Macquarie University student, Malak Aldabbas, 19, has been visiting on a daily basis. “As a Palestinian, it is my cause, I have to fight for it,” she said. “I can’t stay silent.”

A University of Sydney staff member, Linda Koria, 35, is from Iraq and lost her father in the Iraq war. “As someone who lived through [war], I can’t help but empathise with the Palestinian cause,” she said.

What are protesters demanding?

The students want disclosure of and divestment from all university activities that support Israel, as well as a ceasefire and the end of government ties to the Jewish state.

“We want the University of Sydney to completely cut ties with weapons companies,” Bhattarai said, referencing the university’s “memorandum of understanding” with the French multinational Thales, and links to the US defence contractor Raytheon. “Most blatantly,” she said, the university’s chancellor, Belinda Hutchinson, is one of the directors on Thales’ board.

A high school student, Ewan Polios, 16, began camping at the University of Sydney last week and left when school term began on Tuesday. He said it was “awful” that the university administration considered it normal to have ties to weapons companies supplying to Israel. “I will give up my holidays [to demand an end] to that,” he said.

At the University of Queensland, protesters are demanding the institution close its Boeing Research and Technology Australia Centre and divest from companies with “direct and indirect ties to Israel”, including BAE and Northrop Grumman.

University of Melbourne students are taking aim at the institution’s links to defence companies including Lockheed Martin, which has given $3.5m towards PhD scholarships and research projects since 2016.

ANU students are demanding an end to the university’s investments in BAE, Lockeed Martin and Northrup Grumman amounting to $479,000, and to cut ties with its exchange partner the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

What is happening at the University of Sydney?

About 40 tents sit in the university’s most prominent spot, under the shadow of the historic clock tower, with views of the city. There are also larger communal food and meeting tents. Talks are hosted and sessions have been held in which messages from US camps are read out. The camp is peaceful, with routine checks by campus security.

Many non-protesting students appear to support the camp, with donations of hot meals and cash pouring in. A tent full of food has everything from two-minute noodles to biscuits, popcorn and trays of fruit. Other donations include a shisha pipe, tents, mattresses, camping chairs, tables and waterproof boxes in preparation for bad weather this week. “We’ve been overwhelmed,” Bhattarai said.

Students on campus who were not part of the demonstration supported the protesters’ rights to establish an encampment, despite graduation ceremonies scheduled later in the week.

The president of the Students Representative Council, Harrison Brennan, 21, said the camp was “spectacular” despite being a “highly disruptive action by virtue of how we’re set up”.

“This can be a really long-term thing,” he said. “And I think the university would get a lot of criticism from the broader community who have come out to support us if they were to dare [to] call police [in].”

What is the reaction of Jewish university students?

Some are part of the protests but many are not – and increasing antisemitism is making many avoid campus, according to Zac Morris, the vice-president of the Australian Union of Jewish Students NSW.

He said the University of Sydney encampment was “concerning” because the protests were inspired by the US, where Jews have been violently targeted and the terrorism of 7 October has been praised.

“Jewish students are scared to come to [the University of Sydney] campus,” Morris said.

Even before the encampment, University of Sydney students had received death threats and been advised to stay at home by police, had food thrown at them and doxed, with photos taken and circulated of them, he said. He said university management was in a “difficult” position but had responded “inadequately”.

“It’s really different to what things were like before [7 October],” he said, describing Jewish students who were opting to attend lectures online. “There’s this feeling of having to kind of hide. Things have progressed and are well past the point of what should be acceptable.”

During Tuesday’s encampment rally at the university, the Australia Palestine Advocacy Network president, Nasser Mashni, said antisemitism had no place in the movement.
How have university administrations reacted?

A University of Sydney spokesperson said the institution was “carefully monitoring the gathering at our quadrangle in line with our crowd management protocols to ensure a safe environment for our community”.

They said any slogans, chants or actions that could be reasonably interpreted as implying support for violence, terrorism or infringing the rights of others or threatening the wellbeing of staff or students would not be tolerated. Graduation ceremonies were expected to go ahead this week as planned.

All four universities said they supported the rights of staff and students to peacefully protest in line with Australian law.

Echoing other universities, the University of Melbourne said it “deplores and actively stands against all forms of racism, including antisemitism and Islamophobia”.

“The university does not support the exercise of freedom of speech when the speech undermines the capacity of individuals to participate fully in the university, is unlawful, prejudices the fulfilment by the university of its duty to foster the safety and wellbeing of staff and students, or unreasonably disrupts activities or operations of the university,” a spokesperson said.

The University of Queensland vice-chancellor, Prof Deborah Terry, said the university “has robust processes for assessing and managing research partnerships that consider the ethical implications and their alignment with our core values”.

Additional reporting by Andrew Messenger
Inter-Parliamentary Al-Quds platform endorses global boycott against Israel

Declaration backs global boycott movement against Israel and its supporters, calls on parliaments to enact laws that contribute to boycott

Aynur Ekiz and Muhammed Yasin Gungor |
TRT
02.05.2024 - 


ISTANBUL

The closing declaration of the Fifth Conference of the League of Parliamentarians for al-Quds and Palestine, which took place in Istanbul with the participation of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Speaker of the Grand National Assembly of Türkiye Numan Kurtulmus, supported the global boycott movement against Israel.

"Supporting the global boycott movement of Israel and its supporters and calling on parliaments to enact laws that contribute to the global boycott movement," the 27-point declaration said.

The conference took place in Istanbul on April 26-28.

The first article of the declaration strongly condemned the despotic genocidal war waged by the Israeli occupation state in the Gaza Strip.

The declaration emphasized that the participants consider the Israeli occupation as the biggest obstacle to peace in the region and that the Zionist ideology is the biggest threat to world peace and its actions that violate all humanitarian values.

The declaration condemned the efforts of the US and some Western countries to support the occupying entity militarily and economically and called for the smooth delivery of sufficient food, drinking water and medical aid to the residents of Gaza.

Here are some of the issues included in the declaration:

- Calling to end this war immediately to spare innocent people, stop the machine of crime and destruction.

- Stressing that the policy of killing and annihilation committed by the Israeli war machine has been an official policy systematically practiced against the Palestinian people since the occupation of Palestine in 1948.

- Highlighting the measures of apartheid committed by Israel, which is the ugliest form of occupation in the world.

- Commending the Palestinian resistance and its extraordinary heroism against the genocidal war, and emphasizing that the Palestinian people’s resistance against the occupation by all means is a legitimate right guaranteed by divine laws and international legislation.

- The participants believe that the Palestinian factions defending their people and land are liberation movements that deserve praise and acclaim for their national role in seeking freedom, liberation and independence, and they reject branding them as terrorism.

- Acclaiming the positions of the countries that stood up against the unjust aggression on Gaza since its beginning, and these are most of the countries in the world led by Türkiye, and the distinguished position of its president in refusing to label the Palestinian resistance movements as terrorism.

- Denouncing the lack of impartiality of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court and his visit to Israel while failing to visit the Gaza Strip to inspect the crimes of genocide and demanding him to issue arrest warrants against Israeli criminals involved in the war of genocide.

- Calling for the establishment of an international legal initiative supported by parliamentarians and parliaments that will coordinate the efforts of legal professionals working to prosecute the criminals involved in the genocide war.

- Warning of the new wave of displacement of the Palestinian people from the West Bank and Gaza announced by the Israeli government at the beginning of the war on Gaza.

- Supporting the global boycott movement of Israel and its supporters and calling on parliaments to enact laws that contribute to the global boycott movement in addition to criminalizing dealing and communicating with Israel in all fields.

- Standing firmly in the face of the wave of normalization with Israel, including by some Arab and Islamic countries, and emphasizing that parliamentarians have a decisive role in rejecting normalization by their countries.

- Supporting international activists from various countries of the world who are contributing to efforts to stop the war and lift the unjust siege on Gaza, and inviting parliamentarians to participate in such activities, including the Freedom Flotilla to break the siege.

- Striving diligently to activate the most prominent decision of the conference to establish the global alliance to revive the system of rights, justice, values and rational principles across parliaments, governments and peoples in the face of the alliance of oppression, injustice, tyranny, occupation and racism that supports Israel in its criminal war on the Gaza Strip and to devote the right and support it everywhere in the world, and calling on the Turkish President to take the lead position in this global alliance.

- Contributing to relief efforts and urging parliamentarians and parliaments to provide relief aid to Gaza to confront the danger of famine threatening Palestinians in the Strip.

The closing declaration thanked Türkiye for "their role in supporting the League and hosting its conferences in Türkiye, which contributed to its prestigious global status as an international parliamentary platform defending the Palestinian issue.”

Hasan Turan, chief administrative officer of the Grand National Assembly of Türkiye was elected as the President of the Inter-Parliamentary Al-Quds Platform Türkiye, and AK Party Ankara MP Asuman Erdogan was elected as a member of the Board of Directors of the platform.
ZIONIST OUTRAGE, OUTRAGEOUS ZIONISM

OPINION
Antisemitism

Entire ‘Squad’, 70 Dems vote against H.R. 6090

Will Sen. Schumer kill the Antisemitism Awareness Act? Probably.


Anti-Israel protesters on the Foggy Bottom campus of George Washington University in downtown Washington, D.C. on April 26, 2024. Photo by Andrew Bernard.


DANIEL GREENFIELD
Daniel Greenfield is an Israeli-born journalist who writes for conservative publications.

(May 2, 2024 / JNS)

First, the actual solutions to what’s happening on campus:

1. Deport foreigners supporting terrorists.

2. Defund the departments responsible for turning campuses into activism hubs.

3. Restore order on campuses using state or federal law enforcement.

Two out of three of those are evergreen and even the third would mostly apply to the BLM riots and other forms of political harassment.


House passes bipartisan Antisemitism Awareness Act by wide marginMay 1, 2024

Don’t compromise with pro-Hamas students; expel or suspend themMay 1, 2024

Jerusalem awaiting Hamas’s response to hostage-deal proposalMay 2, 2024

The Antisemitism Awareness Act (H.R. 6090) falls far short of that. Despite the false claims on social media, it does little more than allow Jewish students to sue colleges for allowing harassment of Jews under the guise of “anti-Zionism.” It can also help roll back some of the pro-terrorist propaganda in the classroom.

Will it do that?

The actual bill, which few seem to have read, orders the Department of Education to exclusively use the IHRA definition of antisemitism as opposed to using it alongside other definitions. The practical upshot would be force the department to close the “anti-Zionism” loophole, but in reality there’s no particular reason to think that the same bureaucrats ignoring campus antisemitism now will start taking it seriously just because the House passed a bill ordering it to.

Will the Senate even take up and pass the bill? Probably not.

70 Democrats, including the “Squad” and most of the left, voted against it. Sen. Chuck Schumer has indicated he’s not too excited about it. Rep. Nadler being trotted out to attack the bill publicly suggests Schumer is getting cover to kill it.

The Antisemitism Awareness Act is, like a lot of congressional legislation, probably doomed. It does provide grist for antisemites from the left (and now from the right) to spread conspiracy theories. (No, it does not criminalize the Bible. The IHRA definition states that comparing Israel’s fight against Islamic terrorism to Jews killing Jesus is not a political criticism, it’s antisemitism.)

If the bill actually becomes law (and I don’t believe it will), a Trump administration could appoint people who would actually use it as a tool to end some of the abuses by terror-supporting faculty in the classroom.

For now, the vote on the Antisemitism Awareness Act has revealed that 70 Democrats are against a bill fighting antisemitism.

That’s what it amounts to, and not much else.

The opinions and facts presented in this article are those of the author, and neither JNS nor its partners assume any responsibility for them.