Horse-riding troopers squash anti-Israel protest at University of Texas 
Texas Governor Gregg Abbott condemned the demonstration and called for 
the arrest and expulsion of any student caught in the protest. 
 
By			
			Ronny Reyes  
 
New York Post
Apr 24, 2024
 
University of Texas at Austin students held a short-lived protest on Wednesday. 
An anti-Israel protest at the University of Texas at Austin inspired by
 the Columbia University encampment was quickly crushed before it 
started by Texas State Troopers on horseback Wednesday — with three 
demonstrators arrested. 
The university had warned the Palestine Solidarity Committee, which 
encouraged the students to protest on the campus, that the event was 
unauthorized and would not be allowed to “proceed as planned,” local KVUE reports. 
Despite the warning, hundreds of students walked out of their class 
before noon to demonstrate at the school’s Gregory Plaza with attempts 
to occupy the lawn, only to be met by a phalanx of troopers and cops. 
“I don’t think students were expecting this kind of a response,” 
Amelia Kimball, associate managing editor at student newspaper, The 
Daily Texan, told CNN. 
Video from The Daily Texan shows the moment the officers arrived, 
marching in line and equipped with riot gear as several others 
approached on horseback. 
Kimball said the protest lasted only minutes, with the crowd ordered 
to disperse as she noted “physical struggles between police and 
students.” 
Texas Governor Gregg Abbott condemned the demonstration and called 
for the arrest and expulsion of any student caught in the protest. 
 
Gov. Greg Abbott called for the protesters to be jailed. 

Students had been warned before the protest.  
 
These protesters belong in jail,” Abbot wrote on X. “Antisemitism will not be tolerated in Texas. Period.
“Students joining in hate-filled, antisemitic protests at any public 
college or university in Texas should be expelled,” the governor added.
As of Wednesday evening, police were still pushing and ordering students away with their bikes from the south lawn.
The remaining crowd of students could be heard shouting “Free! Free 
Palestine!,” as they linked arms and ignored officers’ orders. 
The Palestine Solidarity Committee had put out a call for “emergency 
action” on Tuesday calling on students to “reclaim our space” through 
the protest as a show of solidarity with the college demonstrations in 
New York and across the country. 
“In the footsteps of our comrades at Columbia SJP, Rutgers-New 
Brunswick, Yale, and countless others across the nation, we will be 
establishing THE POPULAR UNIVERSITY FOR GAZA and demanding our 
administration divest from death,” the group wrote on Instagram. 
 
Video from The Daily Texan shows the 
moment the officers arrived, marching in line and equipped with riot 
gear as several others approached on horsebackThe administration had warned it wouldn’t allow the campus to be “taken.”  
 
The UT administration, however, told the group on Tuesday that the campus will not be occupied by the protesters. 
Simply put, The University of Texas at Austin will not allow this 
campus to be ‘taken’ and protesters to derail our mission in ways that 
groups affiliated with your national organization have accomplished 
elsewhere,” officials wrote in a statement to the group. 
“Any attempt to do so will subject your organization and its 
attending members to discipline including suspension under the 
Institutional Rules,” the college warned. 
The university has confirmed that 10 people have been arrested over the protest.
UT at Austin did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment. 
One of the protesters arrested was identified as an organizer of the event who was taken to Travis County Jail, according to the Texas Tribune. 
The swift police action in Texas comes as similar protests continue 
at Columbia University, where students are occupying the campus lawn to 
protest Israel’s war in Gaza.
 
The UT administration, however, told the group on Tuesday that the campus will not be occupied by the protesters. 
 
Abbot had slammed the New York demonstrations on Monday for sowing 
the seeds of similar protests that have popped up across the nation’s 
colleges.  
“Ivy League universities are showing that their time has passed,” Abbott wrote. 
State Rep. Gina Hinojosa, a Democrat from Austin, slammed the arrests at UT Austin as unnecessary. 
“Unless there was an actual threat of violence, this is out of hand,” she wrote on X in response to the police action. 
ADDENDUM: Following are pictures from the Daily Mail
   University of Texas students walked out of class and 
gathered in protest as pro-Gaza groups took to universities across the 
US and clashed with police
 Police arrest a student during a pro-Palestine demonstration at the The University of Texas at Austin
  Police arrested activists - who 
burst out in tears when they were handcuffed - after warning them they 
could face criminal charges if they did not disperse 
 One of the protesters detained by Texas troopers is seen above 
  Police have arrested at least 
four demonstrators at UT Austin after warning them they could face 
criminal charges if they did not disperse
  The rally at the Austin campus was organized by the university's Palestine Solidarity Committee (PSJ) chapter
 
    
 
2 comments:
The UT Police practice crowd control and defensive tactics on a regular schedule. The Chief of all UT Police in Texas is a friend. These cops did a fine job. Keep up the good work, David. (USA)
Tolerating bad behavior merely encourages more bad behavior Anybody who has ever raised a child or a puppy knows that, or at least SHOULD know that.
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