Violence erupts at UCLA as protests over Israel’s war in Gaza escalate across the U.S.
Counterprotesters try to dismantle a pro-Palestinian encampment set up on the University of California, Los Angeles campus in the early hours of Wednesday.
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Counterprotesters try to dismantle a pro-Palestinian encampment set up on the University of California, Los Angeles campus in the early hours of Wednesday.
Etienne Laurent/AFP via Getty Images
Violence erupted at
Protesters in the encampment sometimes fought with the counterprotesters, which witnesses say ranged from about 100 to more than 200. People set off fireworks — and journalists and protest organizers say pepper spray or other irritants were used
“The violence unfolding this evening at UCLA is absolutely abhorrent and inexcusable,” Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said in a post on X, formerly Twitter, at 1:47 a.m. local time. “LAPD has arrived on campus.”
The confrontation quickly became a flashpoint among dozens of university protests against the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza that have broken out on campuses across the U.S. A high-profile protest at Columbia University in New York was shut down Tuesday night after police entered a school building occupied by pro-Palestinian protesters.
UCLA newspaper calls out delay in calming violence
As news of the violence spread, so did questions about why administrators and police weren’t able to prevent it, or mitigate it more quickly.
Hours before the confrontation, UCLA Chancellor Gene Block issued a statement saying his administration had “taken several immediate actions,” including significantly boosting security by “adding greater numbers of law enforcement officers, safety personnel and student affairs mitigators.”
And as member station LAist reports, UCLA said on Wednesday that Block’s request for the city to send in police got “an immediate response.”
But media reports from the campus describe an hours-long delay between the first clashes erupting and police intervening. Student newspaper the Daily Bruin accused the school of failing to protect students on its campus.
A pro-Palestinian demonstrator, center, is beaten by counterprotesters during violence on the UCLA campus early Wednesday.
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A pro-Palestinian demonstrator, center, is beaten by counterprotesters during violence on the UCLA campus early Wednesday.
Etienne Laurent/AFP via Getty Images
“Fireworks, tear gas and fights broke out just after 10:50 p.m. Tuesday night,” the newspaper reported. It added that the school issued a statement at 12:40 a.m. saying it had called police. Police arrived slightly after 1 a.m., the paper said.
There was apparently another delay: After the LAPD and California Highway Patrol officers reached the campus, they moved to separate and disperse the groups around 3 a.m., according to local TV station ABC 7.
Barriers and a buffer zone were overrun
Images from the scene showed a large crowd of pro-Israel protesters pulling at metal barricades and wooden pallets the pro-Palestinian group had erected around their encampment.
A crowd of counterprotesters
Like many other campus protests, organizers of the UCLA encampment say their chief demand is for the university system to disclose all financial ties with Israel-based groups, and divest from companies that do business there.
Their protests are also meant to show solidarity with people in Gaza. The Israel-Hamas war has killed more than 34,000 Palestinians, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health, while Israel says some 1,200 Israelis were killed by Hamas in an assault last October. Israel says Hamas is still holding133 hostages.
As the evening wore on, members of the group “began wrestling with protesters inside and [private campus]Daily Bruin.
From there, the violence continued to escalate.
The clash erupted days after the Israeli-American Council, an advocacy group, mounted a competing demonstration on Dickson Plaza, adjacent to the encampment. Despite heightened tensions, that large rally on April 28 ended without major clashes.
Images of that Israeli-American Council-organized event showed two large groups separated by a buffer zone.
But on Tuesday night, the buffer zone was overrun.
NYPD clear protesters from Columbia University building
Police ousted pro-Palestinian protesters at Columbia University from Hamilton Hall on Tuesday night — a school building they had been occupying since Monday. The New York Police Department mounted a large operation to remove the protesters, using an armored vehicle and a mechanized drawbridge to convey officers into the building.
“Approximately 300 people were arrested,” New York Mayor Eric Adams said on Wednesday. That figure includes people who were on the Columbia University campus, as well as others arrested at City College — an institution in the City University of New York system that was a destination for a crowd of demonstrators who marched from Columbia University.
Adams stressed that the police operation took place at Columbia’s request.
“We went in and conducted an operation to allow Columbia University to remove those who have turned the peaceful protest into a place where anti-Semitism and anti-Israel attitudes were pervasive,” Adams said.
He also reiterated that his administration believes many of the protests are led by “outside agitators” who are not students or otherwise a part of the college community. When asked to specify how many of the arrested demonstrators were unaffiliated with the university, Adams said the police are still sorting through records to determine that.