DayofPal– The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) announced Friday that the Trump administration has initiated legal actions against nearly 2,000 university students and activists over their support for Palestine and their participation in anti-genocide demonstrations.
The crackdown follows President Donald Trump’s signing of an executive order earlier this year aimed at combating what the administration terms “antisemitism.”
According to CAIR, U.S. immigration authorities began by revoking student visas and have since escalated enforcement efforts to include arrests and the initiation of legal proceedings. Among those targeted is Mahmoud Khalil, a Palestinian student at Columbia University, who was detained in March despite facing no formal charges. Khalil had been a prominent leader of pro-Palestinian protests on campus.
The executive order, signed in January, effectively prohibits pro-Palestinian and anti-genocide demonstrations at U.S. universities. While American citizens have also engaged in campus protests, foreign students—due to their more precarious legal standing—have borne the brunt of the administration’s enforcement actions.
The administration has publicly backed disciplinary measures taken by institutions such as Yale University, where students protesting a visit by Israeli Minister of National Security Itamar Ben-Gvir faced administrative sanctions.
Actions taken against protesters have included the dispersal of demonstrations, revocation of student group charters, and internal investigations into participants.
Civil rights advocates have tied the government’s actions to the pending Antisemitism Awareness Act of 2025, introduced by Senator Tim Scott (R-SC).
The proposed legislation would mandate the Department of Education to adopt the controversial International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of antisemitism, which critics argue conflates legitimate criticism of Israel with hate speech.
Since March, more than 1,000 foreign students have reportedly lost their legal status in the United States. In response, many universities have advised international students to seek legal counsel and refrain from international travel.
Several legal challenges to the administration’s measures have been filed, with a small number of students succeeding in temporarily restoring their immigration status through the courts.
The initial protests, sparked by opposition to the ongoing Gaza genocide, began at Columbia University and have since spread to over 50 campuses nationwide. Police forces have detained more than 3,100 individuals, the majority of them students and faculty members.
The Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions is scheduled to hold a hearing on the Antisemitism Awareness Act on April 30.
Civil liberties organizations are urging lawmakers to reject the bill, warning that its passage could further erode student activism and academic freedom across American universities.
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