On May 6, 2024 University of Amsterdam (UvA) students established a camp on the Roeterseiland campus to support Palestinians in Gaza and demand action from administrators.[2][3] On May 7, 169 people were detained when the police used a bulldozer to break down the barricades after the protesters refused to leave.[2] In response to the protests, UvA published a list of cooperations with Israeli institutions and universities.[4][5] The university estimated 1.5 million euros in damages.[1]
Twenty encampments have been established in the United Kingdom;[18] across universities in Australia,[19] beginning with the University of Sydney;[20] and in Canada, including an encampment at McGill University.[21] On May 7, protests spread further on European campuses after mass arrests at the University of Amsterdam campus occupation;[22] including occupation of campus buildings at Leipzig University in Germany, Sciences Po in France, and Ghent University in Belgium.[23] As of May 8, protests have taken place in more than 25 countries.[24] On May 13, approximately one thousand students and university staff took part in a national walk-out.[25]
On May 6, 2024 University of Amsterdam (UvA) students gathered to protest at Roeterseiland campus, demanding the university to disclose and cut off its ties with Israeli institutes and corporations.[2] An encampment was erected on the lawn of the campus thereafter, encircled by barricades made of bricks, planks and ropes.[26] Later that night, a group of people in support of Israel sought out a confrontation with demonstrators at the encampment, throwing flares and fireworks at them. They were soon driven away by the demonstrators, while the police did not attempt to intervene.[27][28]
The demonstration went quiet as the night deepened. Most protestors at the encampment rested in tents.[26]
After midnight, riot police and police dogs were mobilized to raid and evict the encampment. Bulldozers were implemented to demolish the barricades, and some demonstrators tried to fight back.[28] Physical conflicts between protestors and the police took place, followed by the arrest of 125 people. Most people left the scene by 4:30am.[29]
Around 4pm, over a thousand people gathered at Roeterseiland campus of University of Amsterdam, condemning the reaction from the university to call on the police for the eviction of the encampment.[30] Later on, the protesting people marched along Weesperstraat and ended up at Oudemanhuispoort campus of University of Amsterdam. The demonstrators soon took over the buildings and set another encampment inside. Paving bricks, bicycle racks, desks, planks and other objects were removed by demonstrators to establish barricades, which blocked all essential paths to the encampment. A number of supporters stayed outside the barricades and echoed the chanting from demonstrators settling in the encampment. The encampment lasted throughout the night without interference from the police.[26]
The executive board of University of Amsterdam claimed in a statement on 8 May that a discussion between the executive board and protestors was held in the same morning, and another conversation was scheduled later in the afternoon.[31] However, riot police soon broke into the encampment in the afternoon as barricades were demolished by bulldozers. Protestors inside the encampments were cornered and later on removed by the police. It was also reported by witnesses that some people got attacked by the police without doing anything.[26]
With the eviction, a number of demonstrators moved to Rokin, which is in the vicinity of Oudemanhuispoort campus, and blocked Damrak, a main street in the city center of Amsterdam.[32] The demonstration at Rokin kept for hours, and was ended as the police charged towards the protesting crowds. Some demonstrators were dissolved as being chased by police vans, batons and police dogs. A number of them ended up at Rembrandtplein, where the demonstration slowly subsided.[33]
On May 9, another protest was organised which again started at the Roeterseiland university campus of University of Amsterdam. Thousands of protestors went on to march through the city.[34] Three protestors were arrested by the police.[35]
On May 13, approximately one thousand students and staff took part in a national walk-out at 11 am, followed by occupying campus buildings at the University of Amsterdam, as well as in Dutch cities Groningen and Eindhoven, according to a protest group. Police in riot gear subsequently ended the protests in Amsterdam.[36] The university subsequently closed for two days after the renewed occupations on campus.[37]
^"US college protests: Who are the student groups and others involved". Reuters. April 30, 2024. Retrieved April 30, 2024. Among the lead student groups in the coalition are the Columbia chapters of Jewish Voice for Peace and Students for Justice in Palestine. The two decades-old anti-Zionism advocacy groups that protest Israel's military occupation have chapters across the country that have been key to protests on other campuses.
^Treisman, Rachel (May 1, 2024). "How some faculty members are defending student protesters, in actions and in words". NPR. Archived from the original on May 2, 2024. Retrieved May 2, 2024. It's one of several schools around the country where professors are getting arrested at demonstrations, circulating letters in support of arrested protesters and holding no-confidence votes in their administrations.
Makoii, Akhtar (May 8, 2024). "Pro-Palestinian protesters project 'student intifada' slogan onto university". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on May 9, 2024. Retrieved May 9, 2024. Police cleared a pro-Palestinian tent encampment at George Washington University on Wednesday after protesters projected a US flag in flames and slogans including "Long live the student intifada" onto a building overnight.
Alvarez, Maximillian (May 3, 2024). "Inside the 'Student Intifada': A roundtable with campus organizers". The Real News Network. Archived from the original on May 9, 2024. Retrieved May 9, 2024. It is being called the Student Intifada, a grassroots protest movement spreading to different college and university campuses around the country involving students at over a hundred campuses, setting up encampments, occupations and protests (...)
Starr, Michael (May 7, 2024). "'Student intifada here to stay': Harvard activists defy suspension threat". The Jerusalem Post. Archived from the original on May 10, 2024. Retrieved May 9, 2024. Anti-Israel activists groups defied Harvard University warnings that their protest encampment must dissolve under threat of suspension, proclaiming the campus occupation movement a "student intifada" in a press conference on Monday.