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Dutch police on Wednesday clashed with pro-Palestinian protesters as officers moved in to clear barricades at the city’s main university. Social media images showed dozens of police dressed in riot gear exchanging baton blows with a group of protesters when officers started clearing out an area in the Amsterdam city centre.
Students are demanding that the University of Amsterdam sever ties with Israel over the Gaza war and are inspired by ongoing demonstrations at US campuses. “Police are starting to clear the barricades that have been set up on the terrain,” Amsterdam police wrote on social media platform X. “The operation has been authorised by the mayor,” the police added.
Intense police repression at the University of Amsterdam encampment right now. Negotiations broke down, and the police are preparing to raid.Support demo is needed outside
footage courtesy of SJP Amsterdam, which was the first SJP chapter in the EU pic.twitter.com/m6jHrQY5eL
— National Students for Justice in Palestine (@NationalSJP) May 8, 2024
Images on the local AT5 channel showed police arresting several demonstrators, numbering a few hundred, roughly pulling one off a front-end loader. Images also showed police surrounding and dragging away a small but vocal group of protesters remaining on the campus, while a front-end loader was pushing material used to put up the barricades into a canal.
Protesters are waving placards saying “Free Palestine” and shouting “Shame on you” at police. Police say protesters were not just students, but also contained elements “who were not affiliated to the university and were deliberately seeking conflict with the police.” Representatives of the protesters and UvA management were in talks on Wednesday, but protesters told the NOS public broadcaster discussions had led to nothing.
The protests started at the university on Monday, after which some 140 people were arrested. The Amsterdam city council is due to have an emergency debate about the ongoing demonstrations on Friday. Protesters were also gathering elsewhere in the Netherlands, including at the Utrecht University campus.
(With agency inputs)
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