For the last few days, there have been ongoing protests against the war in Gaza taking place on college campuses across the country.

According to health officials, more than 34,000 Palestinians have been killed as Israel plans to launch an offensive on the southern city of Rafah.

College students have been protesting America’s involvement in the war, with students at Columbia University setting up an encampment on campus last week.

It has sparked similar actions at New York University, University of California, University of California, Berkeley and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Two editors of the university paper, Columbia Daily Spectator, which has been covering the ongoing developments on campus, Shea Vance, a sophomore at Barnard College, and Sarah Huddleston, a junior at Columbia, joined NY1 political reporter Ayana Harry on “Inside City Hall” Tuesday to discuss more.

“Places like Columbia, private universities, don’t have to disclose a lot of where they hold their money,” Vance said. “And so, that’s a big starting point for these movements on campus is, you know, before being able to get to the place where you can start talking about potential divestment proposals, thinking about financial transparency and also potential amnesty for students that have faced disciplinary proceedings such as suspensions.”