Police Clear GWU Pro-Palestinian Encampment, Prompting Cancellation of Congressional Hearing

D.C. police cleared the encampment of pro-Palestinian protesters that had taken over part of George Washington University's campus grounds since April 25. The police action happened hours before the Washington chief of police and mayor were scheduled to testify before Congress on their handling of the protests.

WASHINGTON—Police cleared the pro-Palestinian encampment at George Washington University (GWU) in the wee hours of May 8 morning, prompting the cancelation of a congressional hearing about authorities’ handling of the protests.

The operation occurred at 3:45 a.m. EST, just hours before Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser and Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) Chief Pamela Smith were scheduled to testify before the House Oversight Committee.

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) announced in a statement that the hearing had been scrapped. He said he talked with Ms. Bowser and appreciated the clearing of the encampment.

However, he lamented that it took him and his committee to shed light on the situation on GWU’s University Yard as “it was apparent that the D.C. police force was not going to do their job.”

“I am pleased that the potential Oversight hearing led to swift action by Mayor Bowser and MPD Chief Smith,” he said. “We will continue to hold D.C. officials accountable to ensure our nation’s capital is safe for all.”

The Epoch Times has reached out to the committee to ask why the hearing was canceled instead of postponed.

The police arrested 33 protesters, and they were hit with charges such as unlawful entry and assault of a police officer, according to Ms. Smith. Outside the encampment, MPD officers deployed pepper spray toward protesters who supported the encampment but were outside it.

It is currently unknown how many of the arrestees are GWU students. As of press time, they are being processed.

During a May 9 press conference, Ms. Smith said that while the encampment protest started “very peacefully,” there was “an escalation in the volatility of the protests” over the past few days.

On April 2, said Ms. Smith, a GWU police officer was pushed by protesters and an item was stripped from her hands while she was on duty.

The police chief also said counter-protesters and other protesters were gathering for a possible large fight between those supporting and against the encampment. This led to a change in the police’s response toward the encampment, as multiple warnings were issued by police to clear the encampment—only for many, not all, of the participants to adhere to the order.

The police notified the school before clearing the encampment, said Ms. Smith.

She denied that the clearing was due to the timing of the scheduled Oversight Committee hearing; rather, the decision was based on public safety.

The Metropolitan Police Department previously refused the university’s request to clear the encampment, a refusal Mr. Comer called “disturbing and unacceptable.”

In a statement, House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) applauded the clearing of the encampment but said it took the Oversight Committee shining a light on it in order for MPD to end it.

In a statement on May 5, GWU President Ellen Granberg said that the encampment is not peaceful.

“The demonstration, like many around the country, has grown into what can only be classified as an illegal and potentially dangerous occupation of GW property,” she said.

Ms. Granberg asked for police assistance.

“When unlawful activities go beyond these limits, we must rely on the support and experience of the DC Metropolitan Police Department,” the statement reads.

NTD Photo
Encampment of students protesting at George Washington University in Washington on May 3, 2024. (Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times)

The encampment included dressing the head of the yard’s George Washington statue with a keffiyeh, a head covering associated with the pro-Palestinian movement. There were tents and multiple pro-Palestinian signs. Republican members of Congress, including Mr. Comer, visited the encampment last week and called for it to be cleared.

Members inside the encampment last week called before it was cleared for school administrators, including Ms. Granberg, to be guillotined.

A pro-Israel counter-protest was held last week near the encampment and included a visit from Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) in support of the pro-Israel students.

There are 3,000 Jewish undergrads at GWU, making up 27.5 percent of the undergrad population, and 1,500 Jewish graduate students, or 10 percent of the graduate population, according to Hillel International, which has Hillel buildings on college and university campuses to support Jewish student life.

From The Epoch Times

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