Around noon on Monday, April 29, another day of protest at UT-Austin against Israel’s war on Gaza was beginning. After the previous week’s show of force by state troopers called in by university President Jay Hartzell resulted in 57 arrests, this week saw an even more chaotic escalation of state violence, with 79 more arrests. As protests continue, the eyes of the nation are upon UT-Austin, where its students join Columbia University and at least 50 other U.S.
On the South Lawn, there were much fewer police. Students began setting up their encampment, with coolers, blankets, tents, and folding tables full of cupcakes, some playing drums or handing out water. The mood was calm for the moment, but then police reappeared, forming lines to push into the crowd and arrest protesters one by one, sometimes dragging them by their hair or feet.
State troopers in riot gear encircled the encampment and arrested people one by one. As the day wore on and got hotter, medics brought in water bottles and escorted unconscious protesters experiencing heat exhaustion out of the encampment. At least one protester vomited from dehydration as she was being arrested. Troopers and APD issued multiple orders to disperse and continued arresting people, sometimes dragging them on the ground or in the air out of the encampment.
On Tuesday afternoon, UT Board of Regents Chairman Kevin P. Eltife released a statement: “We will continue to call upon the DPS to secure our campus when needed ... we will make every effort to see that students who violate campus policies and outside individuals and groups that violate state law are fully prosecuted.”
Source: Education Headlines (educationheadlines.net)
Jay Hartzell Texas Department Of Public Safety UT Austin
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