• About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact Us
Sunday, February 8, 2026
Dubai News TV
  • UAE
    • Abu Dhabi
    • Dubai
    • Ajman
  • REGION
    • Middle East
    • GCC
    • MENA
      • Syria
    • Asia
      • Afghanistan
      • Bangladesh
      • India
      • Iran
      • Israel
      • Pakistan
      • Sri Lanka
    • Africa
    • Europe
  • REAL ESTATE
  • Opinion
    • EDITOR’S CHOICE
    • The Big Read
    • Viewpoint
    • EXCLUSIVE
  • World
  • Business
    • Local Business
    • Markets
  • TECH
  • HEALTH
  • Horoscope
  • PR
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
  • UAE
    • Abu Dhabi
    • Dubai
    • Ajman
  • REGION
    • Middle East
    • GCC
    • MENA
      • Syria
    • Asia
      • Afghanistan
      • Bangladesh
      • India
      • Iran
      • Israel
      • Pakistan
      • Sri Lanka
    • Africa
    • Europe
  • REAL ESTATE
  • Opinion
    • EDITOR’S CHOICE
    • The Big Read
    • Viewpoint
    • EXCLUSIVE
  • World
  • Business
    • Local Business
    • Markets
  • TECH
  • HEALTH
  • Horoscope
  • PR
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
Dubai News
No Result
View All Result
  • Top News
  • UAE
  • Dubai
  • World
  • Business
  • GOLD/FOREX
  • REGION
  • REAL ESTATE
  • FEATURED
  • EDITOR’S CHOICE
  • ENVIRONMENT
  • Road To Financial Freedom
  • Health
  • Sports

Mahmoud Khalil didn’t wear a mask. He’s now the face of Trump’s crackdown on campus protests

by Web Desk
11 months ago
in International, Top News, World
Mahmoud Khalil didn’t wear a mask. He’s now the face of Trump’s crackdown on campus protests
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Whatsapp

NEW YORK (news agencies) — When protests over the Israel-Hamas war took root on Columbia University’s campus last spring, Mahmoud Khalil became a familiar, outspoken figure in a student movement that soon spread to other U.S. colleges.

The international-affairs graduate student was a fixture in and around the protest encampment on Columbia’s Manhattan campus, serving as a spokesperson and negotiator for demonstrators who deplored Israel’s military campaign in Gaza and pressed the Ivy League school to cut financial ties with Israel and companies that supported the war.

“We want to be visible,” Khalil said last April.

Now that visibility has helped make him the face of President Donald Trump’s drive to punish what he calls antisemitic and “anti-American” campus protests. In the first publicly known arrest of the crackdown, federal immigration agents took Khalil, a legal U.S. resident married to an American citizen, from his apartment Saturday and held him for potential deportation.

To Trump and his administration, Khalil’s arrest is an opening move in a campaign to rid the country of foreign students accused of helping to make American campuses intimidating territory for Jewish students. To civil rights advocates and Khalil’s lawyers, his detention is an assault on free speech and an attempt to suppress pro-Palestinian views.

And to some who have worked alongside the 30-year-old graduate student at the protests and elsewhere, his arrest is a startling takedown of someone with diplomatic experience that he brought to bear in the charged days of the demonstrations.

“You couldn’t meet a kinder or nicer person to work with. He’s thoughtful. He’s intelligent. He’s conscientious,” said former British diplomat Andrew Waller, a colleague of Khalil’s from the U.K.’s Beirut-based embassy for Syria.

Khalil worked there from about 2018 to 2022, running a scholarship fund and supporting the U.K.’s diplomatic engagement with Syria, Waller said, noting that the role required an extensive background check.

He said the two spoke a few weeks ago, and Khalil was focused on becoming a father — his wife is pregnant — and on strife in Syria, where he was born and raised in a Palestinian family. Khalil also expressed concern that he might be targeted by the new Trump administration, Waller said.

After finishing high school in Syria, Khalil was on track to study aviation engineering there, but his plans were upended by the country’s civil war, he wrote in a 2017 essay for an international education charity. He recounted that he left for Beirut, got a job with an education nonprofit that helps Syrian children, and went to a Lebanese university.

“Where would I be if, like countless other Syrian refugees before me, I could not get a scholarship, could not work, or worst of all, could not leave Syria in the depths of the ongoing war?” he wondered in the essay.

Khalil earned a bachelor’s degree in computer science and decided to continue his studies at Columbia, according to an online bio for a 2020 international development conference where he was listed as a speaker.

Then, last spring, protests over the war in Gaza erupted at Columbia, where demonstrators set up tents in the middle of campus and took over an administration building. A wave of similar demonstrations spread to some other colleges around the country.

Khalil served as a prominent student mediator on behalf of pro-Palestinian activists and Muslim students concerned for their safety.

But images of his maskless face at protests, along with his willingness to share his name with reporters, quickly made him a target among those who saw antisemitism in the demonstrations.

“I’m an easy scapegoat for them to say, ‘Look at this Palestinian who never wore a mask and was active in the school protests,” Khalil told an media reporter in an interview last week.

The Columbia Jewish Alumni Association, meanwhile, has called Khalil a “ringleader of the chaos” on campus. A new Columbia disciplinary committee has investigated various allegations against Khalil, most recently whether he violated a university anti-harassment policy by calling a dean “genocidal.”

Khalil is now being held in a federal detention complex in Louisiana.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Tuesday that Khalil should be deported because he organized “protests that not only disrupted college campus classes and harassed Jewish American students and made them feel unsafe on their own college campus, but also distributed pro-Hamas propaganda.” The U.S. government has designated Hamas, the militant group that controls Gaza, as a terrorist organization.

Those who protested alongside Khalil dispute that account.

Share21Tweet13Send

Related Posts

Mexico’s tariffs on India are a double whammy after US tariffs
International

Mexico’s tariffs on India are a double whammy after US tariffs

February 6, 2026
Trump’s ‘maximalist demands’ for Iran put talks in Oman on uncertain ground
International

Trump’s ‘maximalist demands’ for Iran put talks in Oman on uncertain ground

February 6, 2026
Trump tempers criticism of UK’s Chagos Islands deal after talk with Starmer
International

Trump tempers criticism of UK’s Chagos Islands deal after talk with Starmer

February 6, 2026
Activists announce new, bigger aid flotilla to set sail for Gaza in March
Middle East

Activists announce new, bigger aid flotilla to set sail for Gaza in March

February 6, 2026
Germany’s Merz warns of potential escalation as US, Iran prepare for talks
Middle East

Germany’s Merz warns of potential escalation as US, Iran prepare for talks

February 6, 2026
UN rights chief warns his office is in ‘survival mode’ over funding crisis
International

UN rights chief warns his office is in ‘survival mode’ over funding crisis

February 5, 2026
Load More
  • Managing personal liquidity in 7 easy steps

    Managing personal liquidity in 7 easy steps

    317 shares
    Share 127 Tweet 79
  • Algeria Opens Strategic Desert Railway to Untapped Iron Ore Giant

    54 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • Apulian Excellence Roberta Di Laura Honored with Prestigious “Donna d’Autore” Award in Rome

    67 shares
    Share 27 Tweet 17
  • From Vision to Velocity: SureFlow Bets Big on Dubai

    74 shares
    Share 30 Tweet 19
  • Saudi Arabia’s Economy Grows 4.5% in 2025, Fueled by Dual Oil and Non-Oil Expansion

    54 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • Punjab CM Maryam slammed for ‘enjoying fresh Geneva air’ as Pakistanis struggle to breathe

    94 shares
    Share 38 Tweet 24
  • UAE Economy ‘Insulated’ from Global Slowdown, Poised for 4.8% Growth in 2025: World Bank

    60 shares
    Share 24 Tweet 15
  • Moscow confirms Russian forces helped repel ISIL attack on Niger airport

    54 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • India’s New Budget Proposals Boost NRI Investment, Offer Tax Breaks to Global Tech Firms

    54 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
  • Syrian forces deploy in Hasakah under ceasefire agreement with SDF

    54 shares
    Share 22 Tweet 14
United Arab Emirates Dirham Exchange Rate

About Dubai News TV

Dubai News is an English language news and current affairs digital TV channel established to provide round-the-clock news, information, and knowledge about local, regional, and international events. It covers a wide range of topics, including politics, business, technology, culture, and sports, ensuring viewers stay informed and engaged with the latest developments. The channel aims to deliver accurate, unbiased reporting and insightful analysis, catering to a diverse audience with a global perspective.

Categories

  • Abu Dhabi (43)
  • Afghanistan (32)
  • Africa (29)
  • Ajman (5)
  • Artificial Intelligence (4)
  • Asia (82)
  • Bangladesh (87)
  • Business and Economy (735)
  • Cricket (11)
  • Donald Trump (6)
  • Dubai (157)
  • EDITOR'S CHOICE (10)
  • Education (26)
  • Entertainment (1,931)
  • ENVIRONMENT (13)
  • Europe (91)
  • EXCLUSIVE (4)
  • FEATURED (40)
  • Featured Stories (38)
  • Global Business (2,223)
  • Gold & Forex (1)
  • Healthcare (9)
  • heath (10)
  • Horoscope (613)
  • Hospitality (1)
  • India (176)
  • International (8,571)
  • Iran (19)
  • Israel (16)
  • Israel-Palestine conflict (76)
  • Life Style (1)
  • Lifestyle (1,372)
    • Health (8)
  • Local Business (1,598)
  • Markets (11)
  • MENA (817)
  • Military & Defense (8)
  • News (11,341)
    • Business (2,129)
    • Politics (12)
    • World (8,597)
      • Games (2)
      • Travel (6)
  • Opinion (25)
  • Outreach Initiatives (1)
  • Pakistan (286)
  • Personal Finance (7)
  • Philippine (11)
  • Philippines (7)
  • PR (157)
  • REAL ESTATE (169)
  • REGION (4,199)
    • GCC (206)
    • Middle East (3,269)
  • Road To Financial Freedom (7)
  • Russia (28)
  • Russia-Ukraine war (73)
  • Saudi Arabia (15)
  • Sharjah (12)
  • South Asia (91)
  • Sports (1,196)
  • Sri Lanka (45)
  • Startup (7)
  • Syria (7)
  • Tech (497)
  • Technology (488)
  • The Big Read (6)
  • Top News (24,587)
  • turkey (9)
  • TV Shows (7)
  • UAE (6,837)
  • Uncategorized (10)
  • Video Posts (11)
  • Viewpoint (8)

Latest News

Mexico’s tariffs on India are a double whammy after US tariffs
International

Mexico’s tariffs on India are a double whammy after US tariffs

by News Desk
February 6, 2026
0

Kolkata, India – Pankaj Chadha has been running a steel manufacturing unit in Mumbai, India’s financial capital, for the past...

Read moreDetails
Super Bowl 2026: Patriots vs Seahawks – Start time, halftime show, players

Super Bowl 2026: Patriots vs Seahawks – Start time, halftime show, players

February 6, 2026
Trump’s ‘maximalist demands’ for Iran put talks in Oman on uncertain ground

Trump’s ‘maximalist demands’ for Iran put talks in Oman on uncertain ground

February 6, 2026
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact Us

© 2024 Dubai News TV - Powerd by Global Biz International.

No Result
View All Result
  • Top News
  • UAE
  • Dubai
  • World
  • Business
  • GOLD/FOREX
  • REGION
    • South Asia
      • Pakistan
      • India
    • GCC
    • Middle East
  • REAL ESTATE
  • FEATURED
    • Featured Stories
  • EDITOR’S CHOICE
    • The Big Read
    • Viewpoint
  • ENVIRONMENT
  • Road To Financial Freedom
  • Health
  • Sports

© 2024 Dubai News TV - Powerd by Global Biz International.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.