Columbia officials said they had begun suspending students unwilling to leave the Gaza Solidarity Encampment. On Monday morning, after Columbia University President Minouche Shafik announced negotiations had ended without an agreement, the school asked protesters to leave the camp voluntarily before 2 p.m. or face disciplinary actions. But the students vowed to stay put.
As the deadline came, hundreds of students began marching around campus, repeating their demands for the university to divest from Israel. A large group of staff and faculty members, wearing safety orange vests, protected the camp waiting for law enforcement to arrive. But Columbia safety officers didn’t intervene and the NYPD stayed outside of the campus gates.
“This is a smokescreen, bureaucracy is a prison and the students refuse to trade in the blood of Palestinians,” student organizer Sueda Polat said at a press conference on Monday afternoon, adding that the encampment will not be moved “unless by force.”
According to Shafik, a group of academic leaders and student protesters had been negotiating since Wednesday. But the talks hadn’t produced any meaningful results, so she asked those at the encampment to follow the university policies and vacate the lawn voluntarily. Those unwilling to leave would face suspension and won’t be able to graduate this May.
“We are consulting with a broader group in our community to explore alternative internal options to end this crisis as soon as possible,” Shafik said in a statement released on Monday morning.
It is unclear how the university intends to proceed with a crisis that has expanded to other U.S. campuses in the past few days. On April 18, Shafik called the NYPD in to dismantle the initial camp, in an operation that ended with more than 100 arrests. But the protesters built a new encampment the following day, and on Friday, Shafik and other Columbia University leaders said that bringing back the NYPD would be “counterproductive.”