Columbia University to pay over $200m to resolve Trump probes

Web Desk(National Times)- Columbia University said on Wednesday it will pay over $200 million to the US government in a settlement with President Donald Trump’s administration to resolve federal probes and have most of its suspended federal funding restored. Trump has targeted several universities since returning to office in January over the pro-Palestinian student protest movement that roiled college campuses last year. He welcomed the agreement between his administration and Columbia in a post on social media late on Wednesday. In March, the Trump administration said it was penalising Columbia over how it handled last year’s protests by cancelling $400 million in federal funding. It contended that Columbia’s response to alleged antisemitism and harassment of Jewish and Israeli members of the university community was insufficient. “Under today’s agreement, a vast majority of the federal grants which were terminated or paused in March 2025 — will be reinstated and Columbia’s access to billions of dollars in current and future grants will be restored,” the university said in a statement. Columbia said it also agreed to settle investigations brought by the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission for $21 million and that its deal with the Trump administration preserved its “autonomy and authority over faculty hiring, admissions, and academic decision-making.” After the government cancelled funding, the school acquiesced later in March to a series of demands that included scrutiny of departments offering courses on the Middle East and other concessions that were widely condemned by US academics. Last week, Columbia adopted a controversial definition of antisemitism that equates it with opposition to Zionism. The school said it would no longer engage with pro-Palestinian group Columbia University Apartheid Divest. “Imagine selling your students out just so you can pay Trump $221 million dollars and keep funding genocide,” the pro-Palestinian group said on Wednesday, calling the settlement a bribe. Campus protesters demanded an end to US support for Israel’s devastating military assault on Gaza and a commitment that the university will cease investing any of its $14.8 billion endowment in weapons makers and companies that support Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territories. Education Secretary Linda McMahon said Columbia agreed “to discipline student offenders for severe disruptions of campus operations, make structural changes to their Faculty Senate, bring viewpoint diversity to their Middle Eastern studies programs, eliminate race preferences from their hiring and admissions practices, and end DEI (diversity, equity and inclusion) programs.” The government has labelled pro-Palestinian protesters as antisemitic. Protesters, including some Jewish groups, say the government has wrongly conflated their criticism of Israel’s actions with antisemitism and their advocacy for Palestinian rights with support for extremism. Wednesday’s announcement came a day after Columbia disciplined dozens of students over a May pro-Palestinian protest in which demonstrators seized its main library. The agreement asks Columbia to “undertake a comprehensive review of its international admissions processes and policies,” according to the deal’s terms. Columbia is required to designate within 30 days an administrator answerable to the university president and responsible for overseeing the deal’s compliance. The deal requires Columbia to appoint an additional administrator to look at alleged antisemitism and suggest recommendations. Trump has also attempted to use federal funding leverage with other institutions, including Harvard University. His administration has tried deporting foreign pro-Palestinian students, including at Columbia, but faced judicial roadblocks. Rights advocates have raised due process, academic freedom and free speech concerns.



Latest News
PM calls for end to Israel’s ‘brazen aggression’, seeks united Ummah in meeting with Qatari emir
Political fissures hinder Pakistan’s anti-terrorism strategy: report
19 Indian proxy terrorists killed in KP operations: ISPR
FBR’s transformation plan to boost tax-to-GDP ratio from 10.24% to 18%
77th death anniversary of Quaid-e-Azam today
PM Shehbaz announces climate, agriculture emergency after devastating floods
Pakistan calls for UNSC emergency meeting over Israeli aggression in Qatar
Govt lifts ban on new gas connections for households




Multi Media   
Embassy of Pakistan 🇵🇰 in Brussels || Quarterly Recap of Activities, Engagements & Outreach
 Multi Media
DPM Dar sends Trump peace prize nomination to Nobel Committee
 Multi Media
Pak Navy Chief Visits Foreign Ships Participating in Ninth Multinational Naval Exercise Aman | ISPR
 Multi Media
PM Shehbaz Sharif Addresses | Breathe Pakistan Global Climate Conference I 07-02-2025
 Multi Media
COAS visited Muzaffarabad, where he paid homage to the sacrifices of the martyrs.| ISPR