An unknown variety of Columbia college students had been suspended from campus, expelled or had their levels revoked.
New York’s Columbia College stated it has handed down punishments to pro-Palestine pupil protesters who occupied a college constructing final yr throughout a pro-Palestine demonstration.
Punishments vary from multi-year suspensions to expulsions, and revocation of pupil levels, the college stated in an announcement on Thursday, following a assessment of the “severity of behaviour at these occasions” and previous infractions by college students if any.
The college didn’t say what number of college students had been to be punished and declined to call these focused to guard their privateness.
The punishments relate to occasions in April 2024, when pupil protesters briefly occupied Hamilton Corridor throughout a bigger sequence of pro-Palestine and pro-Israel demonstrations throughout the college’s Manhattan campus.
Protesters took motion in search of an finish to US assist for Israel’s warfare on Gaza and for the college to divest from Israeli corporations, amongst different calls for.
In the course of the Hamilton Corridor occupation, college students barricaded themselves within the constructing however had been later eliminated by police. The college claims the protesters additionally vandalised the constructing.
Information of the extreme punishment of pupil protesters comes simply days after former Columbia postgraduate pupil Mahmoud Khalil was arrested by US immigration authorities on the behest of the US Division of State over his involvement in pro-Palestinian activism.
Khalil, who’s a everlasting resident of the US and is married to a US citizen, took half in demonstrations till his commencement in December.
Khalil’s deportation has been briefly blocked by a federal choose, however he stays in custody in a detention facility within the southern state of Louisiana.
Final week, US President Donald Trump additionally introduced that he could be cancelling $400m of federal authorities grants and contracts on account of “respectable issues” of anti-Semitism on campuses linked to the pro-Palestinian protests.
