Exactly 56 years since the New York City Police Department violently dispersed anti-Vietnam War protesters who’d taken over a campus building, Columbia University administrators called on police to break up pro-Palestinian encampments and clear out protesters who had occupied the same building Tuesday night.
More than 100 people were arrested, according to the NYPD. Police in riot gear used ramps and broke windows to enter Hamilton Hall, where protesters had taken over the building earlier that day. They renamed it “Hind’s Hall” after Hind Rajab, a 6-year-old girl in Gaza who had begged for help from first responders from inside a car as an Israeli tank closed in. She and the first responders who were deployed to save her were found dead days later.
An NYPD official had said earlier that evening that those inside Hamilton Hall would be charged with third-degree burglary, criminal mischief and trespassing. School and city officials said that “outside agitators” had been involved, but they have not identified those individuals, said how many non-students were detained or provided credible evidence for the claim.
Students and faculty members have criticized the police operation, carried out at Columbia President Nemat Shafik’s request, as a huge escalation. In a letter to the NYPD, Shafik wrote that the administration had been left with “no choice” after discussions with organizers of the encampment broke down, and that they called the police to campus “with the utmost regret.”
The university’s chapter of the American Association of University Professors said its faculty offered to help defuse the situation on campus but had been “shut out by senior University leadership.”








