Tensions arising from an anti-Israel encampment at Wayne State University in Detroit forced the school to announce on Tuesday that classes would be held remotely until further notice.

Protesters set up the encampment on campus last week to demand the university’s divestment from the Jewish state.

“Due to an ongoing public safety issue, Wayne State University will transition to remote operations, effective immediately until further notice,” the university wrote in an alert issued to students and faculty early Tuesday morning.

It was unclear whether the university has plans to clear the encampment, which has happened at other universities across the country in the wake of the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas. Last week, police cleared an anti-Israel encampment at the University of Michigan after it posed a fire risk.

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Fox News Digital has reached out to the university but did not immediately hear back.

Matt Lockwood, the university’s associate vice president of communications, told the Detroit Free Press over the weekend that the fire marshal was concerned over the accumulation of combustible materials.

Lockwood also said that some walkways near the encampment have been blocked and that “there are a small number of occupants that have challenged public safety.”

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Lockwood told the newspaper that many of the approximately 40 protesters he saw on Tuesday did not appear to be students, though he added that it was difficult to tell because many were wearing masks.

The university said that students will receive further information about class arrangements from their instructors via email or Canvas, an online course management system.

All on-campus events were also canceled until further notice, the school said.

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