NEW YORK: A Palestinian student arrested as he was about to finalize his US citizenship accused Columbia University on Thursday of eroding democracy with its handling of campus protests against the Israel-Hamas war.
Mohsen Mahdawi, 34, who led anti-war protests at the Ivy League school in New York in 2023 and 2024, spent 16 days in a Vermont prison before a judge ordered him released on April 30.
On Friday, an appeals court in New York denied the governmentâs request to halt that order, saying the Trump administrationâs jurisdictional arguments were unlikely to succeed and that it hadnât shown that Mahdawiâs release has caused irreparable harm.
âIndividual liberty substantially outweighs the governmentâs weak assertions of administrative and logistical costs,â wrote the three-judge panel at the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals.
The Trump administration has said Mahdawi should be deported because his activism threatens its foreign policy goals, but the judge who released him on bail ruled that he has raised a âsubstantial claimâ that the government arrested him to stifle speech with which it disagrees.
Mahdawi spoke to The Associated Press on Thursday, a day after pro-Palestinian protesters clashed with campus security guards inside the universityâs main library. At least 80 people were taken into custody, police said.
Mahdawi said instead of being a âbeacon of hope,â the university is inciting violence against students.
âColumbia University is participating in the destruction of the democratic system,â Mahdawi said in the interview. âThey are supporting the initiatives and the agenda of the Trump administration, and they are punishing and torturing their students.â
A spokesperson for Columbia University, which in March announced sweeping policy changes related to protests following Trump administration threats to revoke its federal funding, declined to comment Thursday beyond the response of the schoolâs acting president to Wednesdayâs protests.
The acting president, Claire Shipman, said the protesters who had holed up inside a library reading room were asked repeatedly to show identification and to leave, but they refused. The school then asked police in âto assist in securing the building and the safety of our community,â she said in a statement Wednesday evening, calling the protest actions âoutrageousâ and a disruption to students for final exams.
Mahdawi, a legal permanent resident, was born in a refugee camp in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and moved to the United States in 2014.
At Columbia, he organized campus protests and co-founded the Palestinian Student Union with Mahmoud Khalil, another Palestinian permanent resident of the US and graduate student who was arrested in March.
On April 14, Mahdawi had taken a written citizenship test, answered verbal questions and signed a document about the pledge of allegiance at an immigration office in Colchester when his interviewer left the room. Masked and armed agents then entered and arrested him, he said. Though he had suspected a trap, the moment was still shocking, he said, triggering a cascade of contrasting emotions.
âLight and darkness, cold and hot. Having rights or not having rights at all,â he said.
Immigration authorities have detained college students from around the country since the first days of the Trump administration, many of whom participated in campus protests over the Israel-Hamas war. Mahdawi was among the first to win release from custody after challenging his arrest.
In another case, a federal appeals court ruled Wednesday in favor of Tufts University student Rumeysa Ozturk, upholding an order to transfer her from a Louisiana detention center back to New England to determine whether her rights were violated and if she should be released.
Mahdawi said his message to the Turkish student and others was âstay positive and donât let this injustice shake your belief in the inevitability of justice.â
âPeople are working hard. Communities are mobilizing,â he said. âThe justice system has signaled to America with my case, and with Rumeysaâs yesterday with the Second Circuit, that justice is functioning and checks and balances is still in function.â
Mahdawiâs release, which is being challenged by the government, allows him to travel outside of his home state of Vermont and attend his graduation from Columbia in New York later this month. He said he plans to do so, though he believes the administration has turned its back on him and rejected the work of a student diplomacy council he served on alongside Jewish, Israeli and Lebanese students.
âI plan to attend the graduation because it is a message,â he said. âThis is a message that education is hope, education is light, and there is no power in the world that should take that away from us.â