Horse-riding troopers squash anti-Israel protest at University of Texas that was inspired by Columbia

An anti-Israel protest at the University of Texas at Austin inspired by the Columbia University encampment was quickly crushed before it started by Texas State Troopers on horseback Wednesday — with three demonstrators arrested.The university had warned the Palestine Solidarity Committee, which encouraged the students to protest on the campus, that the event was unauthorized and would not be allowed to “proceed as planned,” local KVUE reports.

Despite the warning, hundreds of students walked out of their class before noon to demonstrate at the school’s Gregory Plaza with attempts to occupy the lawn, only to be met by a phalanx of troopers and cops.“I don’t think students were expecting this kind of a response,” Amelia Kimball, associate managing editor at student newspaper, The Daily Texan, told CNN.

Video from The Daily Texan shows the moment the officers arrived, marching in line and equipped with riot gear as several others approached on horseback.Kimball said the protest lasted only minutes, with the crowd ordered to disperse as she noted “physical struggles between police and students.” The Palestine Solidarity Committee had put out a call for “emergency action” on Tuesday calling on students to “reclaim our space” through the protest as a show of solidarity with the college demonstrations in New York and across the country.

“In the footsteps of our comrades at Columbia SJP, Rutgers-New Brunswick, Yale, and countless others across the nation, we will be establishing THE POPULAR UNIVERSITY FOR GAZA and demanding our administration divest from death,” the group wrote on Instagram.The UT administration, however, told the group on Tuesday that the campus will not be occupied by the protesters.

Simply put, The University of Texas at Austin will not allow this campus to be ‘taken’ and protesters to derail our mission in ways that groups affiliated with your national organization have accomplished elsewhere,” officials wrote in ...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

Recent Articles