Former White House adviser and son-in-law to ex-American president, is spearheading efforts to rally donors for upcoming Trump fundraiser in New York, Reuters reports, highlighting his role in support...
As the "Student Spring" movement gains momentum, NYU begins disciplinary hearings targeting peaceful student activists demanding an end to Israel’s war on Gaza.
Biden administration is violating domestic law by sending offensive weaponry to Israel, not just defensive ones, says ex-spokesperson of State Department, arguing that many American diplomats are aware of this, but fear speaking out.
Amidst nationwide chaos and anti-war protests with over 2,400 arrests on 46 US campuses since April 17, notable deals have emerged at elite academic institutions like Brown, Northwestern, and Rutgers.
Students at Princeton begin hunger strike, and University of California is slammed by faculty for failing to protect students. Here is more on Student Spring movement sweeping US campuses:
Data from ACLED, leading source of real-time data on political violence and protest activity across the globe, belies claims of Biden and Trump that Student Spring movement — campus protests against Israel's war on Gaza — is violent.
Canadian police have arrested alleged hit squad members believed to be ordered by Indian government to kill Sikh separatist in Vancouver, sparking diplomatic tensions.
Elon Musk's Tesla says an Indian battery-maker's branding misleads consumers, while the Indian company argues it has separate operations and predates Tesla in India.
The "Student Spring" protests on US campuses, the biggest since the Vietnam demonstrations in the 1960s and 1970s, have inspired universities from Australia to Mexico to the United Kingdom to protest in solidarity with Palestine.
The deal involves offering incentives to Israel to end their brutal war in Gaza and advanced weaponry to Saudi Arabia.
As universities and police struggle to control demonstrations that have brought US campuses to a standstill, student-led protests against Israel's "genocidal" war in Gaza show no signs of abating two weeks on.
Police continue crackdown on participants of Student Spring protests in New York, Texas, and California while Minnesota University resolves encampment issue with protesters.
UCLA campus is witnessing a massive police crackdown on student protesters over Israel's war in Gaza, as demonstrators continue to demand justice at US universities nationwide.
Law enforcement officials have long sought to discredit protests by invoking the spectre of “outside agitators,” dating back to the Civil Rights movement.
The remarks came as student protests over Israel's war on Gaza have spread to many college campuses after being inspired by demonstrators at New York's Columbia University.
US President Biden says Beijing's economic slowdown and challenges of Tokyo, Moscow, and New Delhi largely stem from xenophobia and reluctance toward welcoming immigrants.
Northwestern and Brown universities led by example amidst campus protests, effectively navigating the Gaza War outcry as Student Spring protests swept America, in sharp contrast to Columbia, UCLA which called police on their own students and staff.
Critics of Anti-Semitism Awareness Act — that conflates criticism of Israel with anti-Semitism — say the government's overreach will chill free speech and the bill infringes upon free speech.
Police dismantle encampment at Dartmouth College while law enforcement personnel advance onto Portland University campus. And, at UCLA, protesters are asked to disperse but standoff continues. Here is the latest:
Emory University professor Noelle McAfee exposes false pretext of "outside agitators," advocating for increased faculty support for student civic actions amid Israel's Gaza invasion.
In an interview with Time magazine, Trump says if he wins back White House, Biden could face multiple criminal prosecutions, while also reflecting on his "bad experience" with Netanyahu, leaving open possibility of withholding military aid to Israel.
Brown University becomes first Ivy League institution to consider severing financial ties with Israel, marking a significant milestone in pro-Palestine Student Spring protests sweeping US campuses and beyond.
Columbia University president Minouche Shafik calls police on students, following sustained pro-Palestine protests by students who inspired demonstrations in many campuses, some of them violently suppressed, giving US its own version of Arab Spring.
Police enter Columbia University after defiant students dismiss university's expulsion threat, and Brown University agrees to hold Israel's divestment vote. We bring you the latest on the wave of campus protests.
"We don't want to see a major ground operation in Rafah," US National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby says following the Israeli premier's comments that Tel Aviv will invade Rafah with or without truce deal.
Students in solidarity with Gaza and Palestinians are rallying in protest, demanding that universities take action by divesting from companies they accuse of supporting Israel’s ongoing war on the besieged enclave.
Dozens of protesters took over a building at Columbia University in New York, barricading the entrances and unfurling a Palestinian flag out of a window.
White House says it will "continue to raise our concerns" after Washington Post reported an officer in India's RAW was directly involved in foiled plan to assassinate a US citizen and an assassination of Sikh leader in Canada.
Officers seen in viral footage draw severe criticism while a Muslim advocacy group CAIR calls for full investigation into what's being called an Islamophobic incident amid Student Spring protests engulfing US universities.
Discussions are under way to bring in legislation aimed at blocking International Criminal Court's decision, US news outlet Axios reports, as Netanyahu is said to have requested help from Biden against arrest warrants.
Nothing can "reverse the damage done to Palestine and to Palestinians," academics write in letter, adding The New York Times "could still reverse some of the damage it has done to itself with its silence."
Columbia University begins suspending students who defied an ultimatum to disperse, and police make arrests at University of Texas, taking number of US-wide arrests to 1,000. Here is more:
India summons Canadian envoy to protest, what it calls, such "disturbing actions" being allowed to continue unchecked.
Fidan and Blinken discuss the dire humanitarian situation in Palestine's Gaza alongside the Russia-Ukraine war.