Progressive Student Union and Students for Justice in Palestine members and other supporters gathered outside the University Center on Wednesday to protest U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement stepping onto UTA grounds with little announcement.
ICE and Texas Border Patrol officers were at the Maverick Activities Center for a criminology and criminal justice career fair on March 27, sparking the student organizations to hold the ICE Off Campus rally.
Ryan Hoffman, Progressive Student Union member, said it was irresponsible of the university to bring ICE to campus without notice, especially when UTA has an international student population of over 6,000.
“We’re demanding an end to the invitation of ICE on campus, and although we know the university can’t realistically keep ICE off campus, we’re also asking them to implement MavAlerts to warn whenever ICE is on or near campus,” Hoffman said.
Coming from a family that immigrated from Costa Rica, he said he’s seen his own family, who came to the U.S. legally, be profiled. He said seeing the hate bestowed upon immigrants and mass deportations happening around the country is “horrifying.”
In an email sent out Monday, UTA informed students that the university has not received federal reports of ICE or Customs and Border Protection being on campus.
Seraphine Pecson, Progressive Student Union vice president, said student activism sometimes feels like talking to a brick wall. Across the country, she said she has seen the government taking steps to suppress their actions.
Last month, Secretary of State Marco Rubio ordered diplomats to search social media posts of visa applicants to deter the acceptance of those suspected of criticizing the U.S. and Israel, according to the New York Times.
Mahmoud Khalil, a Columbia University graduate student and Palestinian activist, was one of the “first of many” to be detained as President Donald Trump’s administration cracks down on immigration laws and on-campus opposition to the war in Gaza, despite being here legally, according to the Associated Press.
“We’re entering a new phase of struggle in which the government is certainly more afraid of the masses than ever before,” Pecson said. “They finally recognize student action for what it is.”
Sana Abu, Students for Justice in Palestine vice president, said she has been fighting for the liberation of her country long before now, and that passion has been amplified since coming to university.
Abu said the main demand from Students for Justice in Palestine is for UTA to divest from all companies sending aid to Israel.
“Our tuition money should not be going to kill families, children, men, women in countries overseas,” she said.
Bilingual education junior Roque Sanchez said he went to the protest to be a voice for those experiencing injustice. While this may not affect all communities, he said it affects his peers.
“You can make a difference, because it can feel pretty helpless at times. I’ve felt that for a while now, but you can do something about it. You can change your reality by coming out here,” Sanchez said.
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