College, local government officials are declaring occupations to be âillegalâ structures, giving police the green light to tear them down, arrest âtrespassers.â
Pro-Palestinian activists and students remain entrenched in ad hoc encampments on more than 80 campuses across the United States, including dozens where university and local government officials are demanding they depart or face arrest for trespassing and unlawful assembly in the coming days, if not hours.
That process is already underway with San Diego County Sheriffâs deputies arriving at the University of CaliforniaâSan Diego (UCSD) campus at daybreak on May 6 to clear out a âGaza Solidarityâ encampment, arresting dozens.
UCSD Chancellor Pradeep K. Khosla said in a statement that activists and students have occupied part of the campus since May 1 and have been asked for a week to remove their tents and fortifications but refused.
âThe encampment has tripled in size in violation of the groupâs commitment not to expand the footprint. This encampment poses an unacceptable safety and security hazard on campus,â he said.
George Washington University President Ellen Granberg is among officials warning students inside a campus encampment that patience is growing thin regarding their disruptive occupation.
In a May 5 statement, she called the encampment âpotentially dangerousâ and said it has been âco-optedâ by activists unaffiliated with the school engaged in âan illegal and potentially dangerous occupation of GW property.â
âWhen protesters overrun barriers established to protect the community, vandalize a university statue and flag, surround and intimidate GW students with anti-Semitic images and hateful rhetoric, chase people out of a public yard based on their perceived beliefs, and ignore, degrade, and push GW Police Officers and university maintenance staff, the protest ceases to be peaceful or productive,â Ms. Granberg said.
As of May 6, more than 2,400 have been arrested in pro-Palestinian protests on at least 45 campuses in at least 30 states since the April 18 arrests of 108 Columbia University students in New York City, according to a running tally by The Associated Press and on-the-scene accounts by reporters for The Epoch Times.
The demonstrations are disrupting final exams at some schools and clouding commencement exercises elsewhere, such as at Columbia University, which announced on May 6 that it will not stage a campuswide graduation ceremony on May 15 but instead will have smaller, school-based ceremonies.
âOur students emphasized that these smaller-scale, school-based celebrations are most meaningful to them and their families,â Columbia said in a May 6 statement.
âThey are eager to cross the stage to applause and family pride and hear from their schoolâs invited guest speakers.â
That announcement drew a sharp rebuke from U.S. House Speaker Rep. Mike Johnson (R-La.) who called for the Columbia University Board of Trustees to fire President Minouche Shafik.
âPresident Shafik and Columbia University administrators have displayed a shocking unwillingness to control their campus. Theyâve allowed outside agitators and terrorist-sympathizing students and faculty to rewrite campus rules and spew vile, anti-Jewish aggression,â he said in a May 6 statement.
âNow, thousands of students whoâve worked hard to achieve their degrees will not get the recognition they deserve.â
Mr. Johnson said that because it is âabundantly clear that President Shafik would rather cede control to Hamas supporters than restore order,â trustees should âimmediately remove her and appoint a new president who will.â
âOur once great universities desperately need strong moral leadership, now more than ever,â he said.
Emory University announced on May 6 that it would scale back and move its May 13 graduation ceremony off its Decatur campus near Atlanta to Gas South Arena in Duluth, about 20 miles away.
âPlease know that this decision was not taken lightly,â Emory University President Gregory Fenves said in a statement.
âIt was made in close consultation with the Emory Police Department, security advisers, and other agenciesâeach of which advised against holding commencement events on our campuses.â
With ad hoc encampments being declared âillegal temporary structuresâ to justify policeâs clearing them outâeven if protests are peacefulâPrinceton University students are using a new tactic: a hunger strike.
At least 17 undergraduate students are taking part in a hunger strike that began on May 5, the Daily Princetonian reported.
USC, UCLA Campuses Reopen
The University of Southern California (USC) was the first major university to alter its commencement plans because of the protests, announcing on April 25 that it would instead host ânew activities and celebrationsâ to ensure graduation events are âmeaningful, memorable, and uniquely USC.â
Ironically, a sense of normalcy is returning to USC, as well as to the campus of its crosstown rival, the University of CaliforniaâLos Angeles (UCLA).
USCâs University Park campus reopened on May 5 after police cleared a pro-Palestinian encampment for the second time in less than a week without making any arrests, and UCLAâs campusâthe scene of violent skirmishing between protesters and counter-demonstratorsâreopened on May 6 with staff expected to âresume workâ and facility âencouraged to resume in-person instruction as soon as possible.â
Professors have an option to conduct classes courses remotely at their discretion through May 10 âwithout the need for departmental authorization,â UCLA said.
âA law enforcement presence continues to be stationed around campus to help promote safety.â
About 20 UCLA faculty members protested over the weekend at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, supporting the protests and demanding that UCLA Chancellor Gene Block resign immediately.
The American Association of University Professors, which includes more than 500 local campus chapters and 39 state organizations, condemned âin the strongest possible terms, the heavy-handed, militaristic response to student activism that we are seeing across the country.â
âToo many cowardly university leaders are responding to largely peaceful, outdoor protests by inviting law enforcement in riot gear to campus and condoning violent arrests,â the group said in a statement signed by more than 50 chapters.
Floridaâs university system staged commencements over the weekend without disruption, as did two of the nationâs largest universitiesâOhio State University and the University of Michigan.
Pro-Palestinian protesters attempted to disrupt University of Michigan graduation ceremonies in Ann Arbor on May 4 but were quickly removed, with no arrests reported.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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