Student removes nearly 3,000 US flags from Sept. 11 display at St. Louis-area university

ST. LOUIS (AP) - A member of Washington University's student government placed nearly 3,000 U.S. flags meant to commemorate victims of the Sept. 11 attacks in trash bags, prompting an investigation by the school.

The university's chapter of College Republicans had placed the 2,977 flags on Mudd Field at the school's campus in St. Louis to honor Saturday's 20th anniversary of the attacks.

Fadel Alkilani, a vice president of finance for the Student Union, acknowledged he removed the flags on Saturday and put them in plastic bags as part of a protest but he was interrupted when another student began recording video of him.

After a video was posted on social media, Alkilani said in a statement he intended to leave the bags on Mudd Field along with statistics detailing the human cost of Sept. 11 since the attacks. He said the flag display did not mention Islamophobia in the U.S. or civilian casualties in the Middle East caused by the U.S. military, the Kansas City Star reported.

Washington University Chancellor Andrew Martin said in a statement that removing the flags was "reprehensible" and was seen as "a personal affront by many, at WashU and beyond, and as an affront to the ideals of our institution."

Martin, who did not name Alkilani in his statement, said the university will follow its normal protocols while investigating and will ensure "that the student involved has access to campus resources that are regularly available to students as he navigates the consequences of his actions, both on campus and beyond."

Martin said the flag display was an act of free speech, which he called a hallmark of the academic community.

"Students have the right to express their viewpoints, but they also have the obligation to respect others' expressions," Martin said.

Nathaniel Hope, a member of the College Republicans who took the video of Alkilani removing the flags, said the group places the flags on Mudd Field, which is on the western edge of campus, every year to remember Sept. 11.

Hope, a sophomore, told KMOX radio that he called police, who confiscated the flags and returned them to the College Republicans, who reinstalled the flags Saturday.

"These flags were not put in place for any political reason," Hope said. "They were for the lives lost. For anyone, I don't care if you're right-leaning, left-leaning, to remove those flags before Sept. 12 is inappropriate."