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US Justice Department investigating Columbia protests for terrorism violations

The US Justice Department is looking into whether student protests at Columbia University over the Gaza war violated federal terrorism laws, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche has said.

Blanche added that the investigation is also looking into civil rights violations tied to the protests last year, as part of Trump’s “mission to end antisemitism in this country”.

“We are also looking at whether Columbia’s handling of earlier incidents violated civil rights laws and included terrorist crimes,” Blanche said.

“This is long overdue.”

Blanche also stated that federal law enforcement had executed a search warrant tonight as part of a separate probe into whether Columbia University harbored undocumented immigrants on its campus.

Federal agents raid Columbia dorm rooms as university expels students

Columbia University and the US Department of Homeland Security are continuing their crackdowns on pro-Palestinian student protesters.

The university has suspended or expelled multiple students, and the Justice Department says it is now examining if the protests violated terrorism laws.



Don't read the YouTube comments, bunch of brain washed idiots.


Jewish demonstrators rally for Palestinian activist

Hundreds of Jewish demonstrators brought Trump Tower in New York to a standstill on Thursday as they demanded the release of a Palestinian student activist.

Mahmoud Khalil is being held without charge in the US state of Louisiana and threatened with deportation, despite being a US permanent resident.




Pro-Palestine students lead mass march in New York in support of Khalil

Pro-Palestine students are leading a large march this evening from Columbia University in Manhattan, New York, to demand the release of Palestinian student Mahmoud Khalil and to denounce the university’s decision to expel students supporting Palestine.

The students raised pictures and banners in support of Khalil and other pro-Palestine students.




Repression against students reveals US government’s ‘hypocrisy’: Cuba FM

Cuba’s Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez Parrilla has said that “repressive actions” against university students in the US reveal the country’s “hypocrisy”.

“Expulsions and other repressive actions against US university students for organising and participating in protests against the Israeli genocide in Gaza reveal the hypocrisy of the US government in matters of democracy … and complicity with the extermination of the Palestinian people,” Parrilla said in a post on X.



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Long read, but very relevant

‘Trump wants to deport foreign students like me. Universities must defy him’

When I arrived to study in the United States, the terrifying spectre of deportation was the last thing on my mind.

As a Brit – a citizen of “the First World” – I was supposedly the beneficiary of the “special relationship” between the US and the United Kingdom.

As awful as it was, deportation happened to asylum seekers from Mexico or Haiti, in a world far removed from the snow-capped hills of Ithaca in upstate New York, home to Cornell University where I study. Or so I thought.


In January, as I taught a class on African American literature, I received a text message that caused me to nervously peer out the window for danger on the street below.

Agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) had been spotted conducting raids in downtown Ithaca. I had reason to be afraid: the day before, President Donald Trump had signed an executive order asking agencies to consider deporting foreign students who, like me, faced disciplinary action for activism on Palestine.

The order requires universities to “monitor for and report activities by alien students and staff” and calls on the secretary of education to provide an inventory of court and disciplinary cases involving alleged anti-Semitism at universities.

Mischaracterising the antiwar protests that took place across US campuses last year, Trump was quoted as saying in a White House fact sheet: “To all the resident aliens who joined in the pro-jihadist protests, we put you on notice: come 2025, we will find you, and we will deport you.”

Trump’s words have since become reality. On Saturday night, ICE immigration agents arrested Mahmoud Khalil, a Palestinian who led the encampment at Columbia University, and transferred him to a detention facility in Louisiana, a thousand miles away from his heavily pregnant wife, who remains in New York City. His status as a permanent resident holding a green card did little to protect him.

By taking unprecedented steps to punish students for peaceful activism against Israel’s war in Gaza, universities paved the way for Trump’s order and the raids that have now begun.

These institutions face a fork in the road: they can comply with the order and become complicit in a crackdown on dissent, or they can stand up to Trump and his clan of bullies, protect their students and hold fast to their stated values of freedom of expression.

Universities must demonstrate whether they are for the First Amendment, or against it.


I, myself, was suspended following the student takeover of a career fair in September 2024, featuring Boeing and L3Harris – companies that have supplied Israel with some of the weapons it has used to carry out its war on the Palestinian population – described as genocide by leading human rights groups.

Many of the 100 or so students who took part in the protest were involved in previous actions, including a major encampment that lasted over two weeks and occupations of major academic buildings.

But in an unprecedented move, Cornell singled out 15 of us for suspension, mostly Black, Muslim, Arab and Jewish students.

Four of us are international students and could face deportation. In addition, Bianca Waked, a Canadian Arab student, who was suspended in April 2024 for leading a protest encampment on campus, also faces this prospect.


Though there was no suggestion that my actions were anti-Semitic or violent in any way during subsequent disciplinary proceedings, I was banished from campus and could not go to the library or visit my academic department.

As I live in a private residence on campus, I was effectively placed under a form of house arrest for a month before my suspension was lifted. All this for taking a stand against the wanton annihilation of innocent people.

Still, I was one of the luckier ones.

Four students were arrested by campus police for shoving and resisting officers; the charges of three of them were either dropped or will be dismissed pending a period without further charges.

At least one student was evicted from campus accommodation, while others were prevented from attending Shabbat or Muslim prayers on campus.

In one high-profile case, Momodou Taal, a fellow British student, was suspended and threatened with deportation.

Experts have warned that the Trump presidency is intent on using Gaza protests as a tool to wage a wider “war on woke” against progressive thought at US universities.

And so by punishing us in this way, Cornell and other universities have left the door wide open for Trump’s book-burning insurgents to run riot.

The suspensions are embarrassing for an institution that prides itself on freedom of expression and a legacy of student protest. Indeed, freedom of expression was the 2023-2024 university theme.

Ironically, while punishing us for a takeover of a career fair, the university still boasts on its website about its progressive history, which includes the 1969 Willard Straight Hall takeover, in which Black students occupied the campus, protesting against institutional racism. On that occasion, Cornell was willing to meet some of the demands of its students and opened the first department of Africana Studies in the US.

The level of censorship at the university became a matter of public embarrassment on February 3, during a keynote lecture by the distinguished activist and academic Angela Davis.

Davis was introduced by one of Cornell’s most senior Black administrators, Marla Love, the dean who oversees the department that handed down my suspension and confinement.

Highlighting that Davis’s work “challenges us to confront the injustices of today”, Love billed the lecture as a meditation on the contemporary relevance of Dr Martin Luther King in tackling “war and militarism, imperialism, human global suffering and governmental abuses of power”. Davis did just that: she challenged injustice, just not in the way the university leadership would have hoped.

“It was from him [Dr Martin Luther King] that we learned about the indivisibility of justice. It is not possible to call for justice for some and leave others outside of the circle of justice,” she said, before going off-topic.

“I understand that there are those that cannot attend this evening because they have been banished from this community because of their efforts to criticise the anti-democratic forces of the State of Israel,” Davis said.

During the question-and-answer session, Davis’s discussant, an undergraduate student, revealed that the university had barred them from fielding questions about Palestine or, ironically, about censorship on campus. They did so anyway.

After lacerating Cornell for hampering campus protest, Davis, sporting her iconic grey afro, leaned over and asked: “So they gave you a list of topics that you weren’t supposed to talk about?”

“This is really scary,” she added.

While Davis’s talk offered a welcome morale boost to student activists, it will do little to remove the threat of deportation hanging over our heads.

Cornell must offer assurances that it will not work with immigration authorities and the Department of Homeland Security to remove us. Cracking down on legitimate protest and dissent will get it nowhere. It got Columbia nowhere already.

Last week, the Trump administration withdrew $400m in federal grants from Columbia University for supposedly failing to contain anti-Semitism and “illegal protests”.  This is the same university that in late April 2024 called in the NYPD to clear a pro-Palestine student encampment. The raid, in which more than 100 were arrested and many beaten up, came days after the then-president, Minouche Shafik, promised to intensify Columbia’s crackdown on student protesters as she fawned before a powerful congressional committee.

All of this is hardly surprising because, after all, “this is America”, a country that, as the hit Childish Gambino song suggests, is steeped in systemic racial violence and overbearing law enforcement.

As non-citizen Black Muslims, Taal and I fall at the intersection of the US’s deep history of anti-Blackness, post-9/11 Islamophobia and now a resurgent xenophobia.

Unless Cornell takes a firm stand, it is unclear if our British passports will save us.



White House tells Columbia to sack academic staff over Israel criticism: Report

The Trump administration is threatening to pull government funding from Columbia University and demanding it sack the leadership of an academic department responsible for scholarship that has been critical of Israel.

The Associated Press news agency reports that Columbia was ordered to place its Middle Eastern, South Asian and African Studies Department under “academic receivership for a minimum of five years”.

Academic receivership is a rarely used practice that puts an academic department under the oversight of a professor or administrator outside the department. It is sometimes used to reset a department in financial or political turmoil.

The Trump administration has already announced it would pull $400m in contracts from Columbia and has threatened further cuts, with another $5bn in grants under review.

The university was also told to ban masks on campus, adopt a new definition of anti-Semitism, abolish its current process of disciplining students and “reform undergraduate admissions, international recruiting, and graduate admissions practices”, AP reports.

Education institutions, academics and lawyers say the demands violate academic freedom and free speech while some Jewish groups and Trump supporters have argued the government should be free to place conditions on funding to universities.