Tufts University student from Turkey, Rumeysa Ozturk, left, who was arrested by immigration agents while walking along a street in a Boston suburb, talks to reporters on arriving back in Boston, May 10, 2025, a day after she was released from a Louisiana immigration detention center on the orders of a federal judge. (Matthew J. Lee/The Boston Globe via AP)

Pro-Palestinian Tufts University graduate targeted by Trump admin returns to Turkey

PhD student held for weeks after visa revoked over anti-Israel op-ed leaves US after case dropped, in high-profile US crackdown on prestigious universities

by · The Times of Israel

A Turkish doctoral student detained by US immigration authorities following her pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel activism has returned to her native country, a rights group said Friday.

“After 13 years of dedicated study, I am very proud to have completed my PhD and to return home on my own timeline,” Rumeysa Ozturk said in a statement released by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).

Ozturk, a student at Tufts University near Boston, who completed her PhD in child study and human development in February, was detained by federal agents in March 2025 and held in Louisiana for six weeks.

Footage of six masked agents dragging Ozturk off the street as she went to break her Ramadan fast with friends sparked an outcry.

She had co-authored a March 2024 article in The Tufts Daily student newspaper criticizing the college’s handling of student anger around Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza. US authorities said the sole basis for revoking her student visa — which was canceled by the State Department — was the editorial.

After a court ordered Ozturk’s release from detention, the US government continued to seek her removal. The administration had appealed the decision to the Board of Immigration Appeals and was awaiting a federal appeals court ruling. The case against her was terminated this week after Ozturk agreed to leave the country, the ACLU said.

President Donald Trump speaks outside the Oval Office of the White House, on April 13, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/ Alex Brandon)

“I am choosing to return home as planned to continue my career as a woman scholar without losing more time to the state-imposed violence and hostility I have experienced in the United States — all for nothing more than co-signing an op-ed advocating for Palestinian rights,” she said in the ACLU statement.

US President Donald Trump has targeted prestigious universities that became the epicenter of the US student protest movement amid Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza that was sparked by the October 7, 2023, Hamas massacre, directing immigration officers to deport foreign student demonstrators.

Her case was seen as a high-profile example of the Trump administration’s efforts to detain and deport non-citizen students over pro-Palestinian or anti-Israel views.

“The government’s arrest and detention of Rumeysa was unlawful and harmful, as numerous federal court decisions have confirmed that the government had no basis for its actions aside from her constitutionally protected speech,” said Jessie Rossman, legal director of the ACLU of Massachusetts.