Columbia University took disciplinary action on Tuesday against many students who participated in the campus protests inside the Ivy League school’s primary library prior to final exams in May and an encampment during alumni weekend last year.
According to a student activist group, nearly 80 students were informed they have been expelled for one to three years. In a statement, Columbia University mentioned that the sanctions imposed by its judicial board also consist of probation for some and the revocation of degrees for those graduated recently.
Most of the students who were disciplined had participated in the pro-Palestinian protest, specifically taking over Butler Library.
The new University Judicial Board, which was moved to the provost’s office in March, has issued its first disciplinary actions. Previously, the UJB operated under the University Senate, a body composed of faculty members and students, and it had drawn criticism from the Trump administration for being seen as too lenient toward protesters.
A Columbia spokesperson stated the timing of these actions is linked to the updated procedure rather than ongoing discussions with the government.
The school announced this month that it will adopt the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s definition of antisemitism. It also committed to appointing coordinators responsible for responding to and reporting civil rights violation complaints. Furthermore, the school plans to work with Jewish organisations to conduct compulsory anti-discrimination training sessions.
The university would not “recognize or meet with” Columbia University Apartheid Divest (CUAD), a union of pro-Palestinian student groups behind the campus demonstrations, or its associates, Columbia Acting President Claire Shipman stated, as per a Bloomberg report.
She added, “Organizations that promote violence or encourage disruptions of our academic mission are not welcome on our campuses and the University will not engage with them,” she said in a statement July 15.”
CUAD, which urges for the school to slash all financial links with Israel, said the library-related sanctions “hugely exceed precedent for teach-ins or non-Palestine-related building occupations”, AFP reported. It further said, “We will not be deterred. We are committed to the struggle for Palestinian liberation.”
(With inputs from Bloomberg, AP and AFP)