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Rutgers releases set of guidelines to curb tent encampment protests

The school also suspended Students for Justice in Palestine for the next year.

University Presidents Testify At House Hearing On Campus Protests And Antisemitism
Jonathan Holloway, president of Rutgers University, testifies at a House Committee on Education and the Workforce hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington headlined “Calling for Accountability: Stopping Antisemitic College Chaos,” May 23, 2024. Photo by Michael A. McCoy/Getty Images.

Rutgers University has released a new set of “guidelines for free expression on campus” that would limit the large anti-Israel demonstrations seen on campus during the previous academic year.

The public university announced the new rules on Tuesday, which include a ban on encampment protests and a requirement for groups to submit request forms three days in advance of protests. Rutgers will require such activist events to take place in a designated field.

Also, in an emailed statement obtained by NorthJersey.com, the school confirmed that it had placed the New Brunswick chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine on suspension for the upcoming school year, to continue until at least July 4, 2025.

Rutgers spokesperson Dory Devlin said in a statement that the anti-Israel organization had “violated the terms of their probationary status and other university policies by disrupting final exams and university operations and failing to comply with university directives.”

The Islamic Republic wrote that U.S. and Israeli vessels, and those of “other participants in the aggression” don’t “qualify for innocent or non-hostile passage” through the vital energy corridor.
“When hate-driven narratives are allowed to masquerade as neutral information, the consequences extend far beyond Wikipedia itself,” Yfat Barak-Cheney of the WJC stated.
“The convergence of ideologically, politically and religiously motivated violent extremist threats to the Jewish community and, by extension, Jewish public officials drives this elevated threat,” the report said.

At a U.S. State Department gathering of first spouses, Netanyahu urged leaders to condemn online harassment of minors.
“We’ve won this,” the U.S. president said. “This war has been won.”
The legislation would expand federal database access and require schools to submit a list of all individuals on visas.