


Over 1,000 protesters across the country have been arrested at pro-Palestinian protests on college campuses over the course of the last week, including many students and faculty members, as universities and city police departments expand a controversial crackdown on a protest movement calling for divestment from Israel.
The arrests include hundreds of protesters at Columbia, UCLA and Emerson University.
The Oregonian confirmed.
At least 12 people were arrested in Portland, Oregon after protesters occupied the Millar Library on Portland State University’s campus,Los Angeles Times reported, citing the Los Angeles Police Department.
At least 200 people were arrested in Los Angeles after police raided the encampment at UCLA early Thursday morning, thestatement, and will be charged with trespassing and resisting arrest.
In Hanover, New Hampshire, about 90 people were arrested at Dartmouth University’s encampment, police in the city said in aPortsmouth Herald reported.
Another 12 people were arrested overnight at the University of New Hampshire in Durham, including 10 students, theYale Daily News reported—10 days after 47 protesters were arrested at the school’s encampment.
Four people, including two students, were arrested after about 200 protesters surrounded the home of Yale president Peter Salovey on Wednesday night, TheNBC New York, which was set up only hours after the other New York City college encampments were destroyed.
Fifteen people were arrested and charged with trespassing at Fordham University’s encampment, the college’s president Tania Tetlow confirmed in a letter obtained byMilwaukee Journal-Sentinel reported.
Thirty-four protesters were arrested at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, but protesters quickly erected a new encampment the same day, TheDallas Morning News reported.
At least 17 people were arrested at the University of Texas-Dallas after police moved to dismantle a protest encampment, theThe Tulane Hullabaloo reported, after the university declared the encampment an “unlawful occupation.”
Fourteen people were arrested at Tulane’s campus encampment in New Orleans early Wednesday morning, including two students, the student newspaperconfirmed, after police dispersed a crowd of more than 100 using tear gas and rubber bullets, the Arizona Republic reported.
Four people were arrested at the University of Arizona’s encampment in Tucson, including one who was charged with “aggravated assault against a peace officer,” the universityconfirmed, after protesters occupied two campus buildings.
Thirty-five people were arrested at California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt in northern California, the universityThe Daily Tar Heel reported, but only six were charged and jailed for trespassing.
Police detained 36 people at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill encampment, student newspaperwere arrested on Columbia University’s campus on Tuesday night, including an estimated “40 to 50” who had previously occupied Hamilton Hall, who the NYPD said could face felony charges for burglary.
One-hundred nine peopleAnother 173 people were arrested at City University of New York’s campus in Harlem the same night.
WTXL reported, and two graduating seniors will not walk at their commencement ceremony due to their alleged actions in the demonstration.
Five protesters were arrested at Florida State University in Tallahassee, Florida and received one-year bans from the campus, local stationDaily Princetonian reported.
A total of 13 protesters were arrested after about 200 people occupied Clio Hall at Princeton University in New Jersey, Thestatement, noting that 45 of the people arrested had “no affiliation” with the college.
Seventy-nine people were arrested at University of Texas-Austin after police clashed with protesters Monday, the university said in asent staff to bail students out of jail and said it would “not bring any campus disciplinary charges against the protestors and will encourage the district attorney not to pursue charges related to encampment violations.”
One-hundred eighteen students were arrested at Emerson University after the Boston Police Department raided their encampment—although the universityconfirmed, including 20 students and faculty members—leading faculty members to call for a no-confidence vote in university president Gregory Fenves, Fox 5 Atlanta reported.
Twenty-eight people were arrested on Emory University’s campus, the schoolAlthough many universities seem to be cracking down on the protests, some have successfully negotiated with protesters and ended the encampments. Northwestern University signed a deal with its student protesters Monday, agreeing to disclose the university’s direct investments and reestablish an “Advisory Committee on Investment Responsibility,” which will include students. The university also agreed to establish a house for Middle Eastern/North African students and will pay for five Palestinian students to attend the university next fall, student newspaper The Daily Northwestern reported. In exchange, protesters agreed to dismantle all but one tent in the encampment—but the protest will remain permitted through June 1, the final day of classes. On Tuesday, Brown University’s encampment was also dismantled by protesters after the university agreed to meet with students on “divestment from the Israeli occupation of Palestinian Territory.”
The massive pro-Palestinian protests on college campuses began after students at Columbia University created their first Gaza Solidarity Encampment on April 17 on the college’s lawn. Authorities at Columbia responded by calling in the NYPD, which arrested over 100 people and forcibly dismantled the camp. However, students began setting up a new encampment the next day. Encampments began popping up on other college campuses across the country, which met resistance from administrators and police.
Several encampments are still ongoing, with protesters standing off against police and school authorities. In New Brunswick, New Jersey, Rutgers University postponed finals Thursday morning as protests continued on the campus lawn. A large protest encampment continues at Harvard University, as well, as finals week drags on at the elite college. Another protest is ongoing at George Washington University. Although Washington D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser previously declined to clear out the encampment, House Republicans, including Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., visited the protest Wednesday and vowed to use their “legislative jurisdiction” over the nation’s capital to clamp down on the protests.