The town center of Gennevilliers, a suburb outside of Paris. Credit: Eole99 via Wikimedia Commons.
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Paris police arrest man who allegedly raped Jewish woman to ‘avenge Palestine’
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The victim told police that she met the man on a dating app in 2023.
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A 32-year-old Jewish woman in the Paris suburb of Gennevilliers was allegedly the victim of an antisemitic crime this week. She says that she was raped, kidnapped and threatened with murder by a man seeking revenge against her for Palestinians.

The suspect, who has not been publicly named, was arrested on Tuesday and charged with kidnapping, religiously motivated death threats and drug offenses. The rape allegation is still under investigation.

The victim told police that she met the man on a dating app in 2023.

She says he held her against her will in his apartment, where he assaulted and threatened her. The suspect allegedly sent disturbing texts to the woman's mother, saying he would "prostitute" her daughter to "avenge Palestine."

The case has drawn outrage across the political spectrum in France. Politicians from both the left and right condemned the attack, and have expressed solidarity with the Jewish community.

Marine Le Pen of the National Rally party blamed "far-left" inaction for allowing an environment of antisemitism to fester. The government's anti-racism delegation called the importation of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to France unacceptable.

Originally published by Israel Hayom.

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A woman was lightly injured as the result of “celebratory gunfire” on Friday night as a delegation of some 100 visitors arrived in Israel for the first pilgrimage by Syrian Druze to the tomb of Nabi Shuaib in the Lower Galilee near Tiberias in 50 years.

The tomb of the Prophet Shuaib is known in English as Jethro's Tomb.

Members of the local Druze communities said they could not leave their homes for hours, accusing the police of lax enforcement of the law, Israel’s public broadcaster Kan reported.

The delegation consisted of dozens of Syrian Druze clerics, Hebrew-language media reported, although this received no confirmation from Israel’s Foreign Ministry.

Sheikh Muafak Tarif, the spiritual leader of the Israeli Druze, condemned the celebratory shooting and issued a warning against further gunfire ahead of the delegation’s slated visit to the Druze town of Peki’in in the Upper Galilee on Saturday.

“Whoever dares to shoot in Peki’in is actually shooting at us. Whoever shoots is not one of us,” the leaders of the Druze community said in a statement.

The entry of the Druze delegation to Israel’s north is the latest testament to the tightening relations between Israel and the Syrian Druze community following the fall of Bashar Assad’s regime in December.

However, the Israeli Druze are not accustomed to shots being fired during celebrations, one local resident told Kan.

“We understand the feelings of the celebrants, but there is also concern because, for the first time, dozens of people from Syria are being brought here, and we know nothing about them,” said the resident.

“We were locked in our homes for hours,” another resident was quoted as saying.

“People were driving wildly on the access road at our junction, which leads to three towns and the tomb complex. They were shooting [in the air] from vehicles with half their bodies outside. Our houses have bullet holes on the balconies. There’s a shooting victim. The police stood by doing nothing. It was lawlessness for hours. Overall, a successful pilot of the Syrian sheikhs’ visit, who saw with their own eyes how we govern the country,” the resident added sarcastically.

After the incident, the Israel Police released a statement that read, “As part of the Northern District’s preparations for the visit of Druze religious leaders to the town of Peki’in, heavy traffic congestion is expected on the roads leading to the area. In this context, Route 864 between the town of Rameh and Monfort Lake [an artificial lake east of the city of Ma'alot-Tarshiha] is expected to be intermittently closed. Drivers and travelers in the north are requested to avoid the area and follow the instructions of the police officers stationed along the roads.”

On Thursday, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz announced that members of the Syrian Druze community will be able to enter Israel to work starting on March 16.

The Druze are an Arab ethnic minority found in Syria, Lebanon and Israel, and are known for being extremely loyal to the states in which they reside. Most Israeli Druze men serve in the Israel Defense Forces and security services, many in combat positions.

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Israeli troops will remain at five strategic outposts in Southern Lebanon “indefinitely,” despite the launch of talks with Beirut over 13 disputed points along the international border, Defense Minister Israel Katz said on Friday.

“In a situation assessment held yesterday by Defense Minister Israel Katz, attended by [Israel Defense Forces] Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir, the head of the Operations Directorate, the head of Military Intelligence, the Home Front Command chief, and other senior officials from the IDF and the defense establishment, the defense minister clarified that the IDF will remain at the five key points controlling the buffer zones in Lebanon indefinitely,” the Ministry of Defense said in a statement.

“This is intended to protect the residents of the north, regardless of any future negotiations over disputed border points,” it continued.

“The defense minister instructed the IDF to strengthen and solidify its hold on the outposts and prepare for an extended stay at the five key points currently held by the IDF,” the ministry concluded.

The five outposts are positioned at dominant points that allow remote control, Israel’s public broadcaster Kan reported.

The posts are located outside Lebanese villages, as the IDF hopes this will prevent friction with the local population, per Kan.

The company-size posts, located within several hundred meters of the border, will be manned by hundreds of IDF soldiers.

The five outposts are located at a hill near Labbouneh, opposite the Israeli border town of Shlomi; on the Jabal Blat peak, opposite Moshav Zar’it; on a hill opposite Moshav Avivim and Kibbutz Malkia; on a hill opposite Moshav Margaliot; and on a hill opposite the town of Metula.

On Tuesday, Israel and Lebanon initiated negotiations toward settling the border disputes between the countries.

Representatives of the IDF, the United States, France and Lebanon agreed during a meeting in Naqoura in Southern Lebanon to establish three joint working groups aimed at stabilizing the region.

As part of these developments, and in coordination with the United States, five Lebanese detainees were transferred from Israel to the Land of the Cedars as a gesture of goodwill to Lebanon’s recently elected President Joseph Aoun.

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Top officers of the Israel Defense Forces conducted a situational assessment in Judea and Samaria on March 14, the second Friday of Ramadan, amid ramped-up security efforts during the month-long holiday.

OC Central Command Maj. Gen. Avi Bluth; head of the Civil Administration Brig. Gen. Hisham Ibrahim; and Judea and Samaria Division commander Brig. Gen. Yaakov ("Yaki") Dolf discussed the military’s operations in the region and visited the Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron and IDF checkpoints, among other places, with the commander of the Israel Police's Judea and Samaria District, Maj. Gen. Moshe Finchi; and the head of the Israel Border Police for Judea and Samaria, Deputy Commissioner Niso Gueta.

https://twitter.com/idfonline/status/1900457812683063762

The IDF Spokesperson’s Unit said in a statement that alongside the military's ongoing counter-terrorism efforts, “troops have been reinforced and wanted suspects have been apprehended."

“Our mission, as always, is to provide effective defense that enables routine life and security for residents while also preserving freedom of worship during the month of Ramadan,” the IDF cited Bluth as saying.

“Significant steps are being taken to maintain security and public order during this period, including assessments and reinforcement of troops. At the same time, even during Ramadan, the security forces continue their defensive efforts across the Central Command area, alongside extensive counter-terrorism operations and the ongoing operation in northern Samaria,” he added.

Israeli security forces in Judea and Samaria over the past week killed three terrorists, apprehended more than a hundred wanted suspects, confiscated dozens of weapons and questioned dozens of terrorist suspects, the army said on Friday.

As part of the ongoing counter-terrorism operation in northern Samaria, the forces conducted targeted raids in the areas of Arraba and Qabatiya, both near Jenin and in the Menashe Brigade’s area of deployment.

“Israeli security forces will continue to act against terrorism in Judea and Samaria to ensure the security of Israeli citizens,” said the military.

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U.S. Middle East special envoy Steve Witkoff on Friday blamed Hamas for disingenuously stalling negotiations over an extended ceasefire in Gaza, making “impractical” demands.

“Unfortunately, Hamas has chosen to respond by publicly claiming flexibility while privately making demands that are entirely impractical without a permanent ceasefire," Witkoff said in a statement in the wake of a new proposal formulated by Washington.

“Hamas is making a very bad bet that time is on its side. It is not,” the envoy warned. “Hamas is well aware of the deadline, and should know that we will respond accordingly if that deadline passes.”

On March 6, U.S. President Donald Trump issued an ultimatum to the Gaza-based terrorist organization, saying that it must release the remaining hostages or else there will be “HELL TO PAY LATER!”

“President Trump has made it clear that Hamas will either release hostages immediately, or pay a severe price,” Witkoff said in his latest statement.

He further said that he and Eric Trager, the U.S. National Security Council’s senior director for the Middle East, proposed on Wednesday in Doha, Qatar, to extend an Israel-Hamas truce beyond Ramadan and Passover as a “bridge” toward talks over a permanent ceasefire.

Hamas was told via the Qatari and Egyptian mediators that this “bridge proposal” must be accepted “quickly” and that Israeli soldier Edan Alexander, who also has American citizenship, must be released “immediately,” Witkoff continued.

The four other men with American citizenship still held in the Gaza Strip are believed to be dead.

Although the details of the proposal were not disclosed, it is believed to parallel the terms of Phase 1 of the ceasefire deal—with a small number of living hostages released in exchange for dozens or more Palestinian terrorists on a weekly basis.

Moreover, Witkoff said, a ceasefire extension would see the alleviation of Israel’s suspension of aid into the Gaza Strip.

Earlier on Friday, Hamas claimed that it had agreed to the release of Alexander and the bodies of four hostages with dual citizenship.

However, the Israeli Prime Minister’s Office, which accepted the U.S. proposal, dismissed the Islamists' announcement, saying it remained “firm in its refusal and has not budged a millimeter,” adding that Hamas was engaged in “manipulation and psychological warfare.”

Israel and Hamas cemented in January a three-stage ceasefire agreement that involved the exchange of hostages held in Gaza for Palestinian terrorists held in Israeli prisons.

Phase 1 ended at midnight on the night of March 1; talks on Phase 2 were supposed to enable the continuation of the ceasefire, with more releases of hostages and further withdrawals from the Gaza Strip of Israeli troops.

In the first stage of the deal, 33 live hostages were freed—25 Israelis and five Thais—as well as the remains of eight others. In exchange, the Jewish state released about 1,800 Palestinian terrorists.

Today there remain 59 abductees in Gaza, of whom 24 are believed to be alive, according to Israeli estimates.

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As Jews around the world celebrate Purim, the annual commemoration of the divine salvation from extermination has a special resonance this year.

Haman, the Purim story’s central villain, the Persian Empire’s grand vizier, descended from the Amalekite peoples, has traditionally served as a stand-in for contemporary villains like Hitler, Stalin (Russian Jews celebrate a Stalin’s Purim marking the Communist tyrant’s death before he could execute his own holocaust in the USSR) as well as Hamas and other jihadists.

But the events of Purim taking place some 2,300 years ago are also intimately linked to the Exodus from Egypt, 3,300 years ago, and the establishment of the first Jewish monarchy several hundred years later under King Saul followed by King David and his dynasty.

And to the very different styles of the two rulers.

After the miraculous Exodus from Egypt, Amalek defied God by ambushing and attacking the Jews. In response, God commanded an eternal war against the nomadic bandit rovers (Exodus 17) and (Deuteronomy 25:19) and tasked every Jewish king with waging that war.

When King Saul receives the divine command to destroy Amalek, he flinches from the mission and loses his right to the monarchy. It falls to the aged Prophet Samuel to finish the job, confronting King Agag of Amalek and telling him bluntly, “As thy sword hath made women childless, so shall thy mother be childless among women” (1 Samuel 15:33) before striking him down. The story of Purim describes Haman as an "Agagite" descended from that very king.

But it is King David who faces a crisis similar to the one that Israel is still living through.

After Saul and his army fall to the Philistines, the kingdom is in disarray. David and his small band of men return to their town only to find that the Amalekites had overrun it, “burned it with fire,” and that “their wives, and their sons, and their daughters, were taken captives.”

“David and the people that were with him lifted up their voice and wept, until they had no more power to weep” (1 Samuel 30:4). “The people spoke of stoning him, because the soul of all the people was grieved, every man for his sons and for his daughters” but David turns to God in search of answers. And God tells him, “Pursue; for thou shalt surely overtake them, and shalt without fail recover all.”

David and his men chase after the enemy. A third of them cannot go on, but the rest continue. The Amalekites are overtaken “eating and drinking and feasting” with their spoils and David surprising them, strikes at twilight, defeats them and rescues all the captives.

In sharp contrast to Saul, King David puts his absolute trust in God, commits totally to a course of action, the destruction of the enemy and the rescue of the hostages, and follows through as rapidly as possible with no hesitation and no other considerations. Where Saul is held back by his insecurities as a leader, David inspires men who were on the verge of stoning him by rallying them to fight with him. Saul is stymied by political considerations while David trusts in God.

That incident has important lessons for the present day as Israel, after going to war nearly a year and a half ago, has once again been reduced to trading terrorists for hostages or their bodies. The initial courageous statements of principle after Oct. 7 gave way to political pressure from the Biden administration, the E.U., the U.N. and other global forces, and then to domestic pressure campaigns insisting that hostage releases take priority over the destruction of Hamas.

What started out as a Davidic war of principle and courage gave way to a Saulite political slog. And this is what Hamas and its backers in the Muslim Brotherhood, Qatar and others around the world had been counting on. The more Israel tried to demonstrate that it was fighting a "just" war as gently as possible, the more accusations of genocide and war crimes were hurled at it.

And Israel was back in the same familiar no-win scenario of fighting Islamic terrorism.

Saul’s mercy on Amalek was not a sign of his compassion, but his weakness and insecurity. In his desperate efforts to avert the prophecy and prevent David from succeeding him, he would violently lash out at everyone from his own son to the priests who had provided his rival with bread. This led the sages to warn that “one who is compassionate to the cruel will ultimately be cruel to those to whom he should show compassion.” A commonplace liberal pattern today.

Israel could learn a good deal from King David’s determined approach to "hostage negotiations." He does not parley with the enemy or waste time on internal debates before turning to God to determine what to do. It’s not that he doesn’t feel the agony of the losses. We are told that he wept along with his men until they could all no longer cry. But after that period of sorrow was done, he acted as quickly as he could, determinedly pursuing the enemy until they were his.

Today anyone who argues that the priority must be to destroy Hamas and win the war is accused of not caring enough about the hostages. The cycle of recriminations over what happened on Oct. 7 and the fate of the hostages has been cynically exploited by Qatar, which has embedded its corrupt operatives among some of the families of the hostages, by the media and the left, to undermine and divide Israelis.

King David refuses to engage in recriminations or to be subject to them. His purpose during Israel’s ancient hostage crisis is not to debate the past, but to act resolutely. He also refuses to divide the fate of the captives from that of the war. Instead, he pursues the unitary purpose of destroying the enemy and saving the captives.

That is only possible because King David acts boldly, rapidly and unpredictably, following the Amalekite raiders at a faster speed than they ever expected and ambushing them. He does not come to negotiate, but to slay them and save the captives, and putting his trust in God, he has no moral qualms about his mission. A problem that continues to trouble Israel even after Oct. 7.

There is much that Israel could have learned and still can learn from King David’s approach to hostage negotiations. The first thing is to eliminate moral doubt about its rightness through faith. The second is to act quickly and debate later about the "endgame" of the conflict. The third is to pursue the release of captives through the destruction of the enemy and by no other means. And finally, to recognize that wars are only won when the debate ends and the battle begins.

Hamas tactics, aided by Qatar, the Muslim Brotherhood and the media, has been to delay Israel’s response, to stir up moral doubt using a propaganda campaign of fake atrocities and war crimes, with false accusations of genocide and constant lies about every military operation, and by demonstrating that it would kill hostages rather than allow Israel to rescue them.

That slowed down Israel’s response at every turn of the Oct. 7 war. And the more the battles slow down, the more debates set in. Victory is the best answer to any argument. Israel would need to worry less about the opinions of every pro-terrorist institution from the U.N. to Haaretz if it delivered consistent mission-focused victories by acting decisively, accepting the risks and rebounding from losses with new operations rather than wallowing in the futility of disproving every lie and arguing over what could have been done differently. Doubt, moral and operational, is corrosive. It corroded King Saul’s nerve until he went mad while King David refused to doubt.

The secret of King David’s decisiveness was the same moral conviction that began when as a boy he confronted Goliath and told the Philistine giant, “You come at me with a sword, and with a spear, and with a javelin; and I come at you in the name of the LORD of hosts, the God of the armies of Israel, whom you have taunted.” That moral certainty is sadly lacking today.

King Saul did not lack courage in response to some outrage, such as when Nahash the Ammonite besieged Jabesh Gilead and refused to accept its surrender unless each man agreed to have an eye put out. It’s only when the way was not clear, doubt set in and the people no longer seemed to be behind him that Saul tended to become insecure and lose clarity.

That is still Israel’s problem today. Its men are courageous when facing armed assaults, but arguments, smears and accusations rob them of their certainty and their momentum. Israel doesn’t lose wars, instead it loses image campaigns and peace negotiations. And unless it reclaims the certainty that it had on Oct. 7 and that Americans had on 9/11, that will continue.

Purim marked the return of certainty as the Jews of Persia who had become all too comfortable, who stayed in Shushan instead of returning to Jerusalem, were faced with sudden annihilation. Some blamed the small minority of Jews who had returned from exile to resettle Israel, others Mordechai for refusing to bow to Haman, but that distant descendant of Saul did not doubt. He had become a Jew, a Man of Judah, not by descent, but through the moral certainty of a David.

And an exiled and downtrodden people suddenly found the strength to fight for its survival.

Originally published by FrontPage Magazine.

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The Israel Defense Forces on Saturday struck a Hezbollah terrorist operating in the area of Kfarkela (aka Kfar Kila) in southeastern Lebanon, the military said.

On Thursday night, the IDF hit a site in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley used by Iranian-backed Hezbollah to produce “strategic weapons."

The situation in Lebanon remains volatile following the end of the truce on Feb. 18. The ceasefire, which went into effect on Nov. 27, ended more than a year of war, after Hezbollah began attacks on Israel on Oct. 8, 2023, one day after the Hamas-led massacre in the northwestern Negev.

On Tuesday, Jerusalem and Beirut initiated negotiations toward settling their border dispute.

Representatives of the IDF, the United States, France and Lebanon agreed during a meeting in Naqoura in Southern Lebanon to establish three joint working groups aimed at stabilizing the region.

The working groups will focus on three main issues: The five strategic points in Southern Lebanon that remain under Israeli control following the expiration of the Israel-Lebanon ceasefire; the U.N.-delineated Blue Line border and the 13 territorial disputes between the two countries; and the status of Lebanese detainees held by Israel.

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U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Friday slammed as "nuts" the terms being demanded by Hamas in hostage-ceasefire negotiations, while insisting the Trump administration was committed to freeing all of the 59 captives held by the Palestinian terrorist group in Gaza.

“We care about all the hostages, we want all the hostages released. ... But we're also talking about bodies. And these trades that are being made, they're ridiculous trades—400 people for three. These are nuts,” Rubio said at a press conference during the G7 Foreign Ministers Meeting in Charlevoix, Quebec. 

“On top of that, you see the condition these people are being released in. ... We’re sitting around as the world, sort of accepting that it’s normal and okay for you to go into a place, kidnap babies, kidnap teenagers, kidnap people who have nothing to do with any wars, that are not soldiers … and taking them and putting them in tunnels for almost a year and a half,” he continued.

"The whole world should continue to say that what Hamas has done is outrageous, it’s ridiculous, it’s sick, it’s disgusting. ... We’re just dealing with some savages. That’s it. These are bad people, terrible people, and we need to treat them as such,” added Rubio.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Friday denounced as "psychological warfare" a Hamas offer to release Edan Alexander, 21, in an effort to jump-start stalled talks.

“While Israel accepted the Witkoff plan, Hamas persisted in its refusal and did not move a millimeter,” according to a statement by the Prime Minister’s Office, referring to Trump administration special envoy Steve Witkoff’s proposal to extend the first phase of the ceasefire.

“At the same time, [Hamas] continues to employ manipulation and psychological warfare,” added the PMO.

Netanyahu was set to convene his ministerial team on Saturday night to review a detailed report from its negotiators and decide on the next steps, the statement said.

Earlier on Friday, Hamas said in a press statement that in response to a proposal from mediators to resume negotiations, it had agreed to “release the Zionist soldier Edan Alexander, who holds American citizenship, in addition to the bodies of four other dual nationals.”

On Friday, Witkoff said in a statement, “Unfortunately, Hamas has chosen to respond by publicly claiming flexibility while privately making demands that are entirely impractical without a permanent ceasefire.”

Witkoff told press on March 6 that the U.S. wants Hamas to free Alexander as a show of goodwill. Alexander, 20, from Tenafly, N.J., is the only one of five American hostages in Gaza believed to still be alive.

Israel estimates 59 hostages are still in Gaza, of whom 35 are believed to be dead.

While Hamas insists on starting the second phase, and rejected Witkoff’s proposal, Israel has agreed to it.

The proposal would extend the ceasefire through the holidays of Ramadan and Passover. Ramadan runs until March 29, while Passover begins on April 12 and ends on April 19.

Israel is reportedly planning to resume its war against Hamas in the coming weeks. It has halted the flow of aid into the Gaza Strip.

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  • Publication Date:
    March 15, 2025
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The Israel Defense Forces on Saturday attacked three terrorists trying to plant explosives near troops operating in the area of Netzarim in the Gaza Strip, the military confirmed.

The IDF on Friday attacked several terrorists attempting to plant bombs close to soldiers in central Gaza. A day earlier, an Israeli Air Force craft struck a group of terrorists trying to lay explosives in the same general area.

Also on Saturday, the IDF attacked two terrorists operating a drone that posed a threat to troops in the area of Beit Lahia, the northern Gaza Strip. The military subsequently targeted additional terrorists who had collected the UAV and were attempting to flee by car.

The first, 42-day phase of the ceasefire agreement with Hamas, which went into effect on Jan. 19, expired on March 1 after the terror group rejected an American proposal to extend the truce for 50 more days.

Nevertheless, Israel has not returned to full-blown war in Gaza, instead opting to bide time in a bid to forge a deal to free additional hostages from Hamas captivity.

According to Israeli officials, there has been progress in negotiations with Hamas in Qatar, raising the possibility of a small-scale interim agreement.

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  • Words count:
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  • Publication Date:
    March 14, 2025

Among the preconditions for formal discussions to restore $400 million in federal funding, which the Trump administration is withholding from Columbia University for its failure to respond adequately to Jew-hatred on campus, are banning masks, reforming the admissions process and moving campus discipline under the university president directly, according to a letter that the Free Press reported.

Officials at the General Services Administration and U.S. Departments of Education and of Health and Human Services wrote to Columbia’s interim president and board co-chairs on Thursday stating that “U.S. taxpayers invest enormously in U.S. colleges and universities, including Columbia University, and it is the responsibility of the federal government to ensure that all recipients are responsible stewards of federal funds.”

“Columbia University, however, has fundamentally failed to protect American students and faculty from antisemitic violence and harassment in addition to other alleged violations of Title VI and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,” the U.S. officials stated.

The letter listed nine items which the officials said were collectively “a precondition for formal negotiations regarding Columbia University’s continued financial relationship with the United States government.” The Trump administration gave the university until March 20 to demonstrate compliance with the nine items.

Among the requirements from the federal government was that “meaningful discipline means expulsion or multi-year suspension,” which is what Columbia said that it did on Thursday.

The Free Press reported that “Columbia must have seen the letter coming,” as “an hour before it was sent, the Columbia University Judicial Board announced plans to suspend students involved in the break-in and occupation of Hamilton Hall last spring.”

The government also told the school that it must “begin the process of placing the Middle East, South Asian and African Studies department under academic receivership for a minimum of five years” and that Columbia “must provide a full plan, with date certain deliverables, by the March 20, 2025, deadline.”

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