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Elite Universities Clear Pro-Hamas Encampments While New Ones Crop Up Elsewhere

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A pro-Hamas encampment at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, Massachusetts, US, May 6, 2024. Photo: Brian Snyder via Reuters Connect

A pro-Hamas “encampment” at the University of Pennsylvania was cleared by the Philadelphia Police Department on Friday morning, a measure that included the arrest of dozens of protesters who had illegally occupied the College Green section of campus for nearly three weeks and refused to leave unless the school took steps to boycott Israel.

Following the action, interim Penn president Larry Jameson issued a statement explaining that the situation on the College Green was pernicious and that the protesters’ demands, including their insistence on amnesty for anyone charged with violating school rules, were nonviable.

“The protesters refused repeatedly to disband the encampment, to produce identification, to stop threatening, loud, and discriminatory speech and behavior, and to comply with instructions from Penn administrators and Public Safety,” Jameson said. “Instead, they called for others to join them in escalating their disruptions and expanding their encampment, necessitating that we take action to protect the safety and rights of everyone in our community.”

He added, “We could not allow further disruption of our academic mission. We could not allow students to be prevented from accessing study spaces and resources, attending final exams, or participating in commencement ceremonies, which for many did not happen during the pandemic.”

On Wednesday night, a crush of people stormed the College Green to “expand” the Penn encampment to cover more school property after conversations with the administration stalled, according to The Daily Pennsylvanian, a campus newspaper. Local police equipped with riot gear prepared to clear them from the area but ultimately stood down for reasons that remain unclear. Earlier in the week, Jameson suggested that the university’s tolerance for the demonstration was exhausted, noting that the pro-Hamas mob had vandalized a statue of Benjamin Franklin and “The Button,” a sculpture built in the early 1980s.

“This decision is viewpoint neutral and affirmed by our policies,” Jameson concluded in Friday’s statement. “Open expression and peaceful protest are welcome on our campus, but vandalism, trespassing, disruption, and threatening language and actions are not.”

An encampment at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) was also cleared on Friday morning by local police, their second attempt at doing so after the school issued an ultimatum to the protesters on Monday. According to numerous reports on social media, police moved in during the early hours of the morning while the protesters slept in their tents. MIT had previously promised not to severely discipline students against whom the school has already filed disciplinary charges if they left by 2:30 pm on Monday afternoon. That deadline has long since expired, but it is not yet clear whether MIT will follow through on punishing what it has described as misconduct.

Harvard University began suspending its protesters on Friday following their rejection of a deal to leave an encampment in Harvard Yard, according to The Harvard Crimson. Earlier in the week, interim president Alan Garber vowed that any student who continued to occupy the section of campus would be placed on “involuntary leave,” a measure that effectively disenrolls the students from school and bars them from campus until the university decides whether they are allowed back.

The disciplinary measures came one day after members of Harvard Out of Occupied Palestine (HOOP) created a sign featuring an antisemitic caricature of Garber as Satan, and accused him of duplicity. HOOP said on Friday that the punishment exposes them to “eviction, food insecurity, degree withholding, and deportation.”

In Washington, DC, protesters returned to the campus of George Washington University on Thursday following the removal of an encampment from the school’s University Yard the prior day. At least one student was arrested for assaulting a police officer, according to the GW Hatchet, which later reported that the students left the area early on Friday morning.

Higher education has been convulsed by pro-Hamas demonstrations since the terrorist organization’s massacre across southern Israel on Oct. 7. Three presidents of Ivy League schools — Elizabeth Magill of the University of Pennsylvania, Claudine Gay of Harvard University, and Martha Pollack of Cornell University — have resigned from their positions amid the tumult and numerous investigations into campus antisemitism that have been opened by the US House Committee on Education and the Workforce.

Over the past three weeks, anti-Zionist college students have escalated their methods, amassing in the hundreds to take over sections of campus from which they refused to leave unless administrators agreed to condemn and boycott Israel. Footage of the protests has shown demonstrators chanting in support of Hamas, calling for the destruction of Israel, and even threatening to harm members of the Jewish community on campus. In many cases, they have also lambasted the US and Western civilization more broadly.

Follow Dion J. Pierre @DionJPierre.

The post Elite Universities Clear Pro-Hamas Encampments While New Ones Crop Up Elsewhere first appeared on Algemeiner.com.