Police respond as clashes erupt at UCLA anti-war camp
Administrators at UCLA called in law enforcement officers Wednesday after violent clashes broke out at a pro-Palestinian protest encampment, a university official said early Wednesday.
Los Angeles police were “responding immediately” to a request for support from the university, according to the office of Los Angeles Mayor Karen
Bass. Police had arrived at the campus about 1:50 a.m. local time, Bass said on social media.
The clashes followed several violent confrontations between pro-Palestinian and pro-Israeli protesters on the campus in recent days. Dueling protests have been particularly intense at UCLA, where Jewish activists have had a larger presence than at other campus demonstrations. On Monday night, a fight broke out between two groups of protesters after about 60 pro-Israel demonstrators attempted to enter the pro-Palestinian encampment.
The university had been among the most tolerant as pro-Palestinian protests and encampments grew at universities nationwide.
But in a sharp turn Tuesday, UCLA administrators declared that the encampment there was unlawful and threatened to suspend or expel any protesters who were students.
Videos posted to social media show clashes Wednesday involving protesters, firecrackers exploding near groups of demonstrators and people spraying what appeared to be chemical irritants at one another. Some people are also seen tearing down metal barricades surrounding the encampment.
The UC Divest Coalition at UCLA, which has been organizing pro-Palestinian protests at the university, said on social media Wednesday that students at its encampment had been attacked by “fireworks, tear-gas, pepper spray and more.”
“Horrific acts of violence occurred at the encampment tonight and we immediately called law enforcement for mutual aid support,” Mary Osako, a vice chancellor at the university, said in an emailed statement Wednesday.
The Los Angeles Police Department said there had been “multiple acts of violence within the large encampment” on the campus. In response to a request from the university, police were assisting campus police and other agencies “to restore order and maintain public safety.”
Bass had spoken to both Gene Block, the university chancellor, and Dominic Choi, the Los Angeles chief of police, according to a social media post by Zach Seidl, Bass’ chief spokesman. Bass said in a later post that “the violence unfolding this evening at UCLA is absolutely abhorrent and inexcusable.”