‘Mad max’: Cops unleash huge truck in Columbia University chaos
Chilling scenes have played out in New York after an army of riot police entered Columbia University amid rising tensions nationwide.
Over 100 people have been arrested amid disturbing scenes in New York where an army of police officers entered Columbia University to round up protestors
Mass arrests came amid rising nationwide tensions over the conflict in the Middle-East.
Hundreds of police officers in riot gear marched onto the campus and approached a building barricaded by pro-Palestinian student protesters.
Incredible images then showed officers entering Columbia’s famous Hamilton Hall — where protesters have barricaded themselves — through a second-floor window.
Live pictures showed at least 50 officers — wearing helmets and some were carrying heavy-duty bolt cutters and flexi-cuffs — using an elevated ramp to climb into the building through a window.
Protesters breached Hamilton Hall in the early morning hours of Tuesday. They barricaded and locked doors at the entrance.
After making over 100 arrests, police rounded up protesters into a bus. Footage from the campus showed police driving a ‘Mad Max style’ truck towards the scene.
An NYPD spokesperson shortly after 1pm (AEST) told media both Hamilton Hall and an encampment on Columbia’s lawn had been cleared without injury.
However, a student negotiator also told the US broadcaster that protests will continue in some form.
The demonstrations — the most sweeping and prolonged unrest to rock US college campuses since the Vietnam war protests of the 1960s and 70s — have led to several hundred arrests of students and other activists.
Many of themvowed to maintain their actions despite suspensions and threats of expulsion.
On Tuesday evening the campus in the heart of New York City, usually accessible to passersby, was sealed off, with police erecting barricades.
Earlier, students had vowed to fight any eviction from Hamilton Hall.
“We will remain here, drawing from the lessons of our people (in Gaza) that stay put, and hold their ground even under the worst conditions,” a protester wearing a Palestinian keffiyeh headscarf, who declined to give her name, told reporters outside the hall.
As she spoke, protesters were seen using ropes to hoist crates of supplies up to the building’s second floor, apparently signalling the students were hunkering down.
President Joe Biden’s White House sharply criticised the seizure of Hamilton Hall, with a spokesman saying it was “absolutely the wrong approach” as police patrolled street entrances to the prestigious New York university.
“That is not an example of peaceful protest,” the spokesman added.
Protests against Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza, with its high Palestinian civilian death toll, have posed a challenge to university administrators trying to balance free speech rights with complaints that the rallies have veered into anti-Semitism and hate.
The unrest has swept through US higher education institutions like wildfire, with many student protesters erecting tent encampments on campuses from coast to coast.
At Columbia, demonstrators vowed to remain until their demands are met, including that the school divest all financial holdings linked to Israel.
The university has rejected the demand, with president Minouche Shafik saying talks with students had collapsed.
“Students occupying the building face expulsion,” Columbia’s office of public affairs said in a statement, adding that the protesters were provided “the opportunity to leave peacefully” but instead declined and escalated the situation.
The university outlined in a press update Tuesday that those in the encampments and Hamilton Hall “number in the dozens,” while nearly 37,000 attend Columbia.
‘Sad day’: Trump on protests
Donald Trump spoke on Fox News. He said it was a “sad day” at Columbia and that authorities “must get to the roots” of antisemitism.
He said: “Biden has to do something. He’s got to strengthen up and be heard.”
Trump claimed without evidence that “paid agitators” have participated in the protest.
“It should never have gotten to this,” he added. “They [the NYPD] should have done it a lot sooner than when they took over the building.”
His comments came hours after President Biden condemned a “ferocious surge of antisemitism” in the US.
“It is our shared moral responsibility to forcefully stand up to antisemitism and to make clear that hate can have no safe harbour in America,” he said.
A nationwide movement
In one of the newest clashes, at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, police moved in on Tuesday to clear one encampment, detaining some protesters in a tense showdown.
Meanwhile at northern California’s Cal Poly Humboldt, a week-long occupation was brought to a dramatic end early on Tuesday when police moved in to arrest nearly three dozen protesters who had seized buildings and forced the closure of the campus.
In Oregon, Portland State University’s campus was closed on Tuesday “due to an ongoing incident” in the library, college authorities said, after local media reported around 50 protesters had broken into the building a day earlier.
And Brown University reached an agreement in which student protesters will remove their encampment in exchange for the institution holding a vote on divesting from Israel — a major concession from an elite American university during the protests.
Footage of police in riot gear summoned at various colleges has been viewed around the world.
UN human rights chief Volker Turk voiced concern at the heavy-handed steps taken to disperse the campus protests, saying “freedom of expression and the right to peaceful assembly are fundamental to society.”
He added that “incitement to violence or hatred on grounds of identity or viewpoints — whether real or assumed — must be strongly repudiated.”
Shafik said many Jewish students had fled Columbia’s campus in fear. “Anti-Semitic language and actions are unacceptable,” she said.
Protest organisers deny accusations of anti-Semitism, arguing their actions are aimed at Israel’s government.
The Columbia student group insisted their protest was peaceful and warned authorities against a crackdown similar to those that marred the anti-Vietnam War movement.
The Gaza war started when Hamas militants staged an unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7 that left around 1,170 people dead, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of Israeli official figures.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 34,535 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry.
– more to come