Berlin students protest for Gaza as demos spread across Europe

A pro-Palestinian activist is carried away from the campus of the Free University of Berlin as police try to break up a demonstration against Israel’s war in the Gaza Strip. (AFP)
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Updated 08 May 2024
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Berlin students protest for Gaza as demos spread across Europe

  • Scuffles erupt between officers, protesters
  • Crackdown on University of Amsterdam protest
  • Israel has killed more than 34,700 Palestinians, most of them women and children, according to the Hamas government's Ministry of Health

AMSTERDAM: German police on Tuesday broke up a protest by several hundred pro-Palestinian activists who had occupied a courtyard at Berlin’s Free University earlier in the day, the latest such action by authorities as protests that have roiled campuses in the US spread across Europe.

Some demonstrators have even called for a break in academic ties with Israel over the war in Gaza.
In Berlin, the protesters had put up about 20 tents and formed a human chain around them. Most had covered their faces with medical masks and draped keffiyeh scarves around their heads, shouting slogans such as “Viva, viva Palestina.”
Berlin police called on the students via loudspeakers to leave the campus. Police were seen carrying some students away as scuffles erupted between officers and protesters. Police also used pepper spray against some of the protesters.
In the eastern German city of Leipzig, about 50 pro-Palestinian protesters set up tents on campus of Leipzig University and occupied a lecture hall on Tuesday afternoon.
Earlier on Tuesday, Dutch police broke up a similar pro-Palestinian demonstration camp at the University of Amsterdam. Police spokeswoman Sara Tillart said about 140 protesters were arrested, two of whom remain in custody on suspicion of committing public violence.
Amsterdam police said on the social media platform X that their action was “necessary to restore order” after protests turned violent. There were no immediate reports of injuries.
Video aired by national broadcaster NOS shows police using a mechanical digger to push down barricades and officers with batons and shields moving in, beating some of the protesters and pulling down tents. Protesters had formed barricades from wooden pallets and bicycles, NOS reported.
In Austria, protesters camped out in about 20 tents set up in the main courtyard of the University of Vienna for a second day Tuesday. With police monitoring, protesters cordoned off the encampment, which is near a memorial for Austrian Jews who perished in the Holocaust.
The University of Vienna and the main Austrian Union of Students distanced themselves from the protest. The union said “antisemitic groups were among the protest’s organizers,” which the protesters denied. Pro-Palestine protest camps have sprung up at about a dozen universities in Britain, including at Oxford and Cambridge, urging the institutions to fully disclose investments, cut academic ties with Israel and divest from businesses linked to the country.
Dozens of students have pitched up Gaza solidarity encampments on lawns outside King’s College at Cambridge University and the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford.
“Oxbridge’s profits cannot continue to climb at the expense of Palestinian lives, and their reputations must no longer be built on the whitewashing of Israeli crimes,” said a joint statement from protesters at the two universities.
Over 200 Oxford academics have signed an open letter supporting the protests.
In Finland, dozens of protesters from the Students for Palestine solidarity group set up an encampment outside the main building at the University of Helsinki, saying they would stay there until the university, which is Finland’s largest academic institution, cuts academic ties with Israeli universities.
In Denmark, students set up a pro-Palestinian encampment at the University of Copenhagen, erecting about 45 tents outside the campus of the Faculty of Social Sciences. The university said students can protest but called on them to respect the rules on campus grounds.
In Italy, students at the University of Bologna, one of the world’s oldest universities, set up a tent encampment over the weekend to demand an end to the war in Gaza as Israel prepared an offensive in Rafah, despite pleas from its Western allies against it. Groups of students organized similar protests in Rome and Naples, which were largely peaceful.
In Spain, dozens of students have spent over a week at a pro-Palestinian encampment on the University of Valencia campus. Similar camps were set up Monday at the University of Barcelona and at the University of the Basque Country. A group representing students at Madrid’s public universities announced it would step up protests against the war in the coming days.
In Paris, student groups called for gatherings in solidarity with Palestinians later Tuesday.
On Friday, French police peacefully removed dozens of students from a building at the Paris Institute of Political Studies, known as Sciences Po, after they had gathered in support of Palestinians.
On Tuesday, students at the prestigious institution, which counts French Premier Gabriel Attal and President Emmanuel Macron among its alumni, were seen entering the campus unobstructed to take exams as police stood.

 


Immigration raids in Minnesota fuel grassroots Somali activism

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Immigration raids in Minnesota fuel grassroots Somali activism

  • “You would never fathom that people would just pluck you off the streets ... and say, ‘Prove to me that you’re a citizen,’” Mohamed said
  • Trump, who ‌has described Somalis as “garbage” who should be thrown out of the country, has said the operations are necessary to combat crime

MINNEAPOLIS: When immigration agents began aggressive operations in Minneapolis last month, Kowsar Mohamed started knocking on doors, fielding late-night calls and mobilizing other Somali Americans into an ad-hoc response team.
Many feared they were being singled out, a worry that revived memories of the state surveillance and arbitrary authority they thought they had left behind when they resettled in the United States.
More than 100 volunteers now patrol south Minneapolis, distribute “Know Your Rights” guides and escort frightened elders — part of a sweeping grassroots effort to counter what many describe as constitutionally suspect raids that are destabilizing Minnesota’s roughly 80,000-strong Somali community, one of the country’s largest refugee populations.
“You would never fathom that people would just pluck you off the streets ... and say, ‘Prove to me that you’re a citizen,’” Mohamed said, referring to reports of aggressive tactics by the agents. “It’s not that we never thought it was impossible. We just believed the Constitution was going to protect us from this level of interrogation.”

TRUMP’S 3,000-AGENT PUSH SPARKS VOTER-INTIMIDATION FEARS
The deployment of 3,000 federal agents — ordered by Republican President Donald Trump — has intensified accusations from Democrats and local leaders that he is targeting ‌a politically influential community ‌ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, deepening fears that the operations amount to intimidation aimed at suppressing ‌Somali ⁠voter turnout.
Trump, who ‌has described Somalis as “garbage” who should be thrown out of the country, has said the operations are necessary to combat crime, though many of those arrested have no criminal charges or convictions. He has also cited a fraud scandal around the theft of federal funds for social-welfare programs in Minnesota to justify sending agents into the state, many of them from US Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Democrats and community leaders accuse the agents of harassing peaceful protesters, racial profiling and searching houses without warrants. Minneapolis has been on edge since the fatal shooting of 37-year-old Renee Good by an immigration agent on January 7.
“A lot of community members escaped war and this administration is triggering another war zone,” said Abdulahi Farah, co-chair of the Somali American Leadership Table, an advocacy group formed in response ⁠to hate crimes and political attacks on Somalis. He said Trump’s history of racist rhetoric against Black and other immigrants of color has emboldened far-right activists and had a destabilizing effect on ‌small businesses and citizens’ general sense of safety.
Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said in ‍a statement to Reuters that immigrants who are served administrative warrants or ‍I-205 removal orders “have had full due process and a final order of removal from an immigration judge.”

PUSHING BACK AGAINST IMMIGRATION RAIDS
In Cedar-Riverside, a ‍normally bustling Somali neighborhood lined with restaurants, boutique shops and convenience stores, business owners say activity is noticeably quieter since immigration agents arrived there last month.
“It’s been really slow,” said Rashid Jama, a grocery store manager in the neighborhood, also known as the West Bank. “A lot of our suppliers are Latino and they’re scared to come to work.”
The efforts of Mohamed, a third-year doctoral student at the University of Minnesota, are part of a broader wave of grassroots initiatives to push back by filming arrests, planning peaceful protests and accelerating voter outreach.
Some Somali Americans fear the raids are a bid to suppress voter turnout before midterm elections in November, according to over a dozen grassroots organizers, local officials and residents interviewed by ⁠Reuters.
“It’s signaling that if we get rid of them, if we scare them, they’re not going to come out to vote in the 2026 midterm election. We know that’s the target,” said Farah, whose group is partnering with other grassroots organizations to train people on priorities like opposing ICE raids as well as broader issues like affordability.
Mosques and neighboring community centers are now turning into political education hubs in Minnesota, local leaders said.
Civil rights advocates and scholars say the Minneapolis immigration operations echo past crackdowns in Black and Latino neighborhoods, fueling fears of political scapegoating, said political science professor Christina Greer at Fordham University.
Somali American voters have largely supported Democrats since refugees began resettling in the US in the 1990s, before becoming more politically active in the 2000s. US Representative Ilhan Omar is the community’s most high-profile member and a frequent target of racist attacks from Trump.
Asked about that and tactics of agents decried by residents, White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said in a statement to Reuters that immigrants “who fail to contribute to our economy, rip off Americans and refuse to assimilate into our society should not be here.”
Minnesota Republican Party Chairman Alex Plechash denied the raids were politically driven, calling the charge “categorically false” but said complaints about aggressive tactics ‌warrant review.
Some Somali community leaders say mobilizing voters will be a priority in the months ahead.
“The power we have is to vote,” said Abdullahi Kahiye, 37, who said he became a naturalized US citizen in 2024. “ICE and whoever is trying to terrorize the Somali community will not succeed.”