Humboldt University: Police clear pro-Palestinian occupiers

Pro-Palestinian protest
“Instructions from the very top”: Police clear occupied Humboldt University building

“Unconditional solidarity with the Palestinian people,” demand the pro-Palestinian demonstrators who have occupied the social science institute at Berlin’s Humboldt University

© Rolf Zöllner / Imago Images

Pro-Palestinian demonstrators have occupied rooms at Berlin’s Humboldt University, but the police are now clearing the area. But that too is controversial.

One day after parts of Berlin were occupied Humboldt University was evacuated by pro-Palestinian activists – under pressure from the Senate. The instruction came from the very top, said President Julia von Blumenthal on Thursday evening. The police initially escorted people out who wanted to leave the building voluntarily. Locked and partly barricaded doors were forcibly opened by the police, said police spokeswoman Beate Ostertag in the evening. The police imposed around 130 short-term restrictions on freedom as part of the evacuation of Berlin’s Humboldt University. A police spokesman said this on Thursday evening. The identity of the occupiers has been determined – around 50 people are still in the building.

The demonstrators occupied the university rooms on Wednesday in protest against Israel and in support of the Palestinians. The occupiers of the group called Student Coalition Berlin accused Israel of “genocide” and “ongoing mass murders” in a statement. It’s about “unconditional solidarity with the Palestinian people.” Among other things, they demand that Berlin universities work for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire and put pressure on the German government. This should impose an arms embargo against Israel and end all military, financial and diplomatic aid to Israel.

In view of the eviction, President von Blumenthal expressed her regret that no agreement had been reached. “I’m not sure if it would have succeeded, but I had the impression that we made a good step with this dialogue,” she said after talks with the pro-Palestinian activists who had occupied the building. “The order then came from the very top to end the occupation. I followed this order,” she said. By this she meant the governing mayor Kai Wegner (CDU), as she stated when asked.

University president offers talks

Blumenthal said of the conversations with the activists that it was possible, with a moderation in mutual respect, “to talk about things where we might even be able to come closer together and also to talk about what separates us.” It was also possible to listen to the suffering of the Palestinian students. Of course, she always had the suffering of Jewish students in mind.

On Thursday evening, the mood at the university was heated, as a DPA reporter observed. Banners were hanging on the building, including one with the words “Free Palestine”. In the courtyard behind a fence, several dozen occupiers, some of them masked with Palestinian scarves, were standing and sitting. They chanted “Viva Palestine” and “Yallah Intifada”. Intifada refers to a series of attacks and terrorist attacks by Palestinians in Israel and is also interpreted as a call to violence. According to the activists’ spokeswoman, around 100 occupiers had spent the night at the institute. The university had tolerated the occupation until 6 p.m. on Thursday.

Humboldt University should act “consistently”.

In the afternoon, Governing Mayor Wegner stated on Platform X that he expected Humboldt University “to take responsibility and act consistently now. Teaching must continue! Our universities are places of knowledge and critical discourse – and not lawless spaces for anti-Semites and terror sympathizers.”

Criticism also came from the police union (GdP). “The autonomy of teaching is important, and universities in particular should be seen as places of exchange and discussion,” said the spokesman for the regional association, Benjamin Jendro. But that is no basis for legitimizing the act outside the democratic framework, shouting anti-Semitic and contemptuous slogans, holding up anti-constitutional posters and committing property damage.

Middle East conflict reaches German universities

The conflict in the Middle East has now reached German universities. There are repeated protests against Israel’s actions in the Gaza war and student actions to show solidarity with the Palestinians. An occupation at the Free University of Berlin a few weeks ago was broken up by the police.

After the Hamas massacre in Israel on October 7, which left more than 1,200 people dead, more than 35,000 Palestinians were killed in the Gaza war that followed, according to the Hamas-controlled health authority, although the figure, which is difficult to verify independently, does not distinguish between civilians and fighters.

In the English university city of Oxford, police arrested 16 people during a protest. According to a BBC report, it was said to have been a sit-in by pro-Palestinian demonstrators. Police said officers visited a location at the university on Thursday morning. It was previously reported that demonstrators had gained access to a private office in one of the buildings.

Note: This article was updated after the clearance began.

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DPA

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