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September 2010

UC Irvine Suspends Muslim Group Over Disruption

Jacob Adelman

LOS ANGELES A University of California, Irvine,
disciplinary committee ruled that a Muslim student group should be suspended for
at least a year because of a protest that disrupted a talk by Israel’s
ambassador and led to the arrest of 11 students, according to documents released
Monday.

The letter from a student affairs disciplinary committee to Muslim Student Union
leaders said the group was guilty of disorderly conduct, obstructing university
activities, furnishing false information and other violations of campus policy.

University spokeswoman Cathy Lawhon said the committee’s decision will be a
binding recommendation to the campus’ office of student affairs if a planned
appeal by the group does not succeed.

MSU attorney Reem Salahi said the committee relied on evidence that was
"inadequate and problematic" but declined to outline the group’s challenge in
detail. She said the decision, if sustained, would leave Muslim students without
an organization representing their interests.

"It really does have very lasting constitutional implications," she said. "It’s
a chilling effect for Muslims on campus and their right to associate."

Israeli Ambassador Michael Oren was repeatedly interrupted and called "murderer"
and "war criminal" by pro-Palestinian students as he was giving a talk on the
Middle East peace process in February.

Eleven students were cited on charges of disrupting a public event after they
were requested to refrain from heckling but did not.

The
Orange County district attorney’s office did not return a phone message
seeking the status of its investigation into those students.

The MSU condemned the ambassador’s appearance but insisted it did
not organize the protests.

The
disciplinary committee, however, said a review of online message group
conversations and minutes from an MSU meeting revealed that the group did
engineer the protests and instructed participants to lie about its involvement.

The group’s preparations allegedly included scripting statements for protesters
to make during the event and instructing participants to cheer at disruptions.

"Be VERY LOUD, firm and strong … but remain composed and under control. Do not
let your emotions get the best of you. Remember that this is a
planned/calculated response and not a venting session," the committee quoted
organizers as telling participants in meeting minutes.

The committee also ruled that the group should be put on disciplinary probation
for a year following its suspension, which ends in August 2011, and that members
collectively complete 50 hours of community service.

The letter, dated May 27, was released following a Freedom of Information Act
request by the Jewish Federation Orange County.


Associated Press, June 14, 2010.

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