Police remove pro-Palestinian protesters from Columbia University's Hamilton Hall.
NEW YORK (AP) —
Police officers carrying zip ties and riot shields stormed a Columbia
University building being occupied by pro-Palestinian protesters, streaming in
through a window late Tuesday and arresting dozens of people.
The protesters had
seized the administration building, known as Hamilton Hall, more than 20 hours
earlier in a major escalation as demonstrations against the Israel-Hamas war
spread on college campuses nationwide.
“After the
University learned overnight that Hamilton Hall had been occupied, vandalized,
and blockaded, we were left with no choice,” the school said. “The decision to
reach out to the NYPD was in response to the actions of the protesters, not the
cause they are championing. We have made it clear that the life of campus
cannot be endlessly interrupted by protesters who violate the rules and the
law.”
NYPD spokesman
Carlos Nieves said he had no immediate reports of any injuries following the melee.
The arrests — where protesters had shrugged off an earlier ultimatum to abandon
the encampment Monday or be suspended — unfolded as other universities stepped
up efforts to end the protests.
Just blocks away
at The City College of New York, demonstrators were in a standoff with police
outside the public college’s main gate. Video posted on social media by news
reporters on the scene late Tuesday showed officers hauling some people to the
ground and shoving others as they cleared people from the street and sidewalks.
An encampment at the public college, part of the City University of New York
system, has been going since Thursday.
Police have swept
through other campuses across the U.S. over the last two weeks, leading to
confrontations and more than 1,000 arrests nationwide. In rarer instances,
university officials and protest leaders struck agreements to restrict the
disruption to campus life and upcoming commencement ceremonies.
Columbia’s police
action happened on the 56th anniversary of a similar move to quash an
occupation of Hamilton Hall by students protesting racism and the Vietnam War.
The police
department earlier Tuesday said officers wouldn’t enter the grounds without the
college administration’s request or an imminent emergency. Now, law enforcement
will be there through May 17, the end of the university’s commencement events.
Fabien Lugo, a
first-year accounting student who said he was not involved in the protests,
said he opposed the university’s decision to call in police.
“They’ve shut down
everything. This is too intense,” he said. “It feels like more of an escalation
than a de-escalation.”
In a letter to
senior NYPD officials, Columbia President Minouche Shafik said the
administration was making the request that police remove protesters from the
occupied building and a nearby tent encampment “with the utmost regret.”
Shafik also leaned
into the idea, first put forward by New York City Mayor Eric Adams earlier in
the day, that the group that occupied Hamilton was “led by individuals who are
not affiliated with the university.”
NYPD officials
made similar claims about “outside agitators” during the huge, grassroots
demonstrations against racial injustice that erupted across the city after the
death of George Floyd in 2020. In some instances, top police officials falsely
labeled peaceful marches organized by well-known neighborhood activists as the
work of violent extremists.
Before officers
arrived at Columbia, the White House condemned the standoffs there and at
California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt, where protesters had
occupied two buildings until officers with batons intervened overnight and
arrested 25 people. Officials estimated the northern California campus’ total
damage to be upwards of $1 million.
President Joe
Biden believes students occupying an academic building is “absolutely the wrong
approach,” and “not an example of peaceful protest,” said National Security
Council spokesperson John Kirby.
Later, former
President Donald Trump called into Sean Hannity’s show on Fox News Channel to
comment on Columbia’s turmoil as live footage of police clearing Hamilton Hall
aired. Trump praised the officers.
“But it should
never have gotten to this,” he told Hannity. “And they should have done it a
lot sooner than before they took over the building because it would have been a
lot easier if they were in tents rather than a building. And tremendous damage
done, too.”
Other colleges
have sought to negotiate agreements with the demonstrators in the hopes of
having peaceful commencement ceremonies. As cease-fire negotiations appeared to
gain steam, it wasn’t clear whether those talks would inspire an easing of
protests.
The nationwide
campus protests began at Columbia in response to Israel’s offensive in Gaza
after Hamas launched 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 local health ministry.
Israel and its
supporters have branded the university protests as 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.
On Columbia’s
campus, protesters first set up a tent encampment almost two weeks ago. The
school sent in police to clear the tents the following day, arresting more than
100 people, only for the students to return – and inspire a wave of similar
encampments at campuses across the country.
Negotiations
between the protesters and the college came to a standstill in recent days, and
the school set a deadline for the activists to abandon the tent encampment
Monday afternoon or be suspended.
Instead,
protesters defied the ultimatum and took over Hamilton Hall early Tuesday,
carrying in furniture and metal barricades. The demonstrators dubbed the
building Hind’s Hall, honoring a young girl who was killed in Gaza under
Israeli fire, and issued demands for divestment, financial transparency and
amnesty.
The Columbia University
Chapter of the American Association of University Professors said faculty’s
efforts to help defuse the situation have been repeatedly ignored by the
university’s administration despite school statutes that require consultation.
Ilana Lewkovitch,
a self-described “leftist Zionist” student at Columbia, said it’s been hard to
concentrate on school for weeks, amid calls for Zionists to die or leave
campus. Her exams have been punctuated with chants of “say it loud, say it
clear, we want Zionists out of here” in the background, she said.
Lewkovitch, who
identifies as Jewish and studied at Columbia’s Tel Aviv campus, said she wished
the current pro-Palestinian protests were more open to people like her who
criticize Israel’s war policies but believe there should be an Israeli state.
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