UNC-Chapel Hill officials erected a 6-foot fence around the flag pole at Polk Place after protesters pulled down the American flag that normally flies there and ran up a Palestine flag.

That brought interim Chancellor Lee Roberts out of his office in the nearby South Building with a police escort. He walked to the flag pole and watched as a group of counter-protesters pulled down the Palestine flag and began to re-raise the American flag.

UNC-Chapel Hill interim Chancellor Lee Roberts walks toward Polk Place on April 30, 2024
Peyton Sickles
/
For WUNC
UNC-Chapel Hill interim Chancellor Lee Roberts walks toward Polk Place on April 30, 2024 - Peyton Sickles/ for WUNC

"That flag represents all of us. To take down that flag, and put up another flag no matter what other flag it is, that's antithetical to who we are, what this university stands for, and what we have done for 229 years," Roberts said. "That flag will stand here as long as I'm chancellor."

The American flag again came down briefly before being raised later in the afternoon. Then officials erected the larger fence around the flag pole, which remained there into Tuesday evening.

A pro-Palestine protester
Peyton Sickles
/
For WUNC
A pro-Palestine protester.- Peyton Sickles/ for WUNC

Pro-Palestinian protesters who had formed an encampment Sunday afternoon said they would not return Tuesday night, citing fear of a large police presence on campus.

During the afternoon, police used pepper spray in an attempt to disperse crowds. Tuesday morning, police broke up an encampment, making 30 arrests, most of whom were not students.

Copyright WUNC 2024

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