DETROIT — Police broke up a pro-Palestinian encampment at a Detroit university and arrested at least 12 people Thursday while more than 100 graduates walked out of commencement at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology on the East Coast, the latest campus stress related to the Israel-Hamas war.
Police in riot gear removed fencing and broke down tents erected last week on green space near the undergraduate library at Wayne State University.
President Kimberly Andrews Espy cited health and safety concerns and disruptions to campus operations. Staff were encouraged to work remotely this week, and in-person summer classes were suspended.
''No individual or group is permitted to claim campus property for their own use and deny others access to that property,'' Espy said.
The camp, she added, ''created an environment of exclusion — one in which some members of our campus community felt unwelcome and unable to fully participate in campus life.''
An outdoor commencement ceremony at MIT in Cambridge, near Boston, was disrupted for 10 to 15 minutes when some graduates walked out. Wearing keffiyehs, the checkered scarves that represent Palestinian solidarity, over their caps and gowns, they chanted ''free, free Palestine'' and held signs that said, "All eyes on Rafah.''
''There is going to be no business as usual as long as MIT holds research projects with the Israeli Ministry of Defense,'' said David Berkinsky, 27, who earned a doctorate degree in chemistry and walked out. ''There are no graduates in Gaza. There are no universities left in Gaza left because Israeli has bombed every single one.''
Eesha Banerjee, a 20-year-old from Birmingham, Alabama, who received her bachelor's degree in computer science, engineering and physics and walked out, said she wants to pressure MIT to become a better place.