Police officers on Thursday night raided a complex at the University of California, Berkeley, that had been occupied by pro-Palestinian protesters, taking several people away in handcuffs. A university spokesperson said at least 12 people had been arrested, but that number was expected to grow.
The new encampment sprang up at the Anna Head complex Wednesday after demonstrators dismantled another larger camp this week following a tentative agreement with university officials.
Some in the splinter group remained overnight in the complex, a fire-damaged structure near People’s Park, while others camped in tents outside it, hanging Palestinian flags and spray-painting the area.
Around 6:30 p.m. Thursday, dozens of officers from the California Highway Patrol and local police and sheriff’s departments began surrounding the area, using bullhorns to order protesters to disperse within 30 minutes or face arrest.
By 7:30 p.m., at least a dozen people had been taken into custody, said Dan Mogulof, a university spokesperson. He said it was unclear how many of the protesters were UC Berkeley students.
Two days before the arrests, pro-Palestinian demonstrators dismantled a much-larger encampment on campus at Sproul Plaza after reaching a tentative agreement with the school chancellor, Carol Christ.
She said that the university would begin discussions around divestment from certain companies and that she planned to publicly support “efforts to secure an immediate and permanent cease-fire” by the end of the month. But she said that divestment from companies that do business with, or in, Israel was not within her authority.
The New York Times News Service