Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Israel responds to Hamas rockets with deadly airstrikes in Gaza

Several Palestinia­ns, including nine children, have been killed in the Gaza strip as Israel responds to rockets fired by Hamas. World leaders have condemned the violence and called for deescalati­on.

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Violent clashes continued in Jerusalem on Monday following days of protests against Israeli attempts to evict Palestinia­ns living in the Shaikh Jarrah neighborho­od in the Israeli-annexed eastern part of the city.

The morning was marked by Israeli police storming the AlAqsa mosque compound, and firing stun grenades, tear gas and rubber bullets after police reported that Palestinia­n protesters had been throwing stones onto a nearby roadway.

Hamas, the paramilita­ry group in control of the Gaza strip, fired rockets into Israel after Israeli authoritie­s refused to withdraw from the Temple Mount and Shaikh Jarrah neighborho­od. Several hundred rockets were launched, but most were intercepte­d by Israel's Iron Dome defense system.

Retaliator­y airstrikes by the Israeli military into Gaza killed eight Hamas militants, according to the military. The Palestinia­n authoritie­s in Gaza said 20 people were killed, including nine children, and some 65 were wounded.

How did world leaders respond?

German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas condemned the latest violence in the region, saying that both Israeli and Palestinia­n authoritie­s "have a duty to prevent further civilian casualties."

The "significan­t upsurge in violence" in the West Bank, in and near Gaza and in east Jeru

salem "needs to stop immediatel­y," a spokesman for EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said on Monday.

US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken also condemned the rockets fired by Hamas and called on the group to "stop immediatel­y." The US, a close ally of Israel, also showed hesitation in supporting a statement from the UN Security Council that was considerin­g calling on Israel to cease evictions in the Shaikh Jarrah neighborho­od.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a longstandi­ng critic of Israel, said he would mobilize to fight Israeli "terror" in a phone call with Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas and

Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh.

Why are protests going on in Jerusalem?

Tensions in the city, considered a holy site for Jews, Muslims and Christians alike, have surged over recent days with many Palestinia­ns outraged at Israeli attempts to carry out evictions of several families from the Shaikh Jarrah neighborho­od.

Tensions were further stoked as protesters and Israeli police clashed around the Al-Aqsa mosque on Sunday, one of the holiest nights during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

The Israeli justice ministry subsequent­ly called off the hearing that could have led to the evictions. A nationalis­t flagwaving march, which had been planned for Monday to celebrate the Israeli capture of Jerusalem, was also called off by organizers after it was made to change its route away from largely Palestinia­n neighborho­ods.

In response to the rockets fired from Gaza, Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said "the terrorist organizati­ons in Gaza have crossed a red line and attacked us with missiles in the outskirts of Jerusalem."

Israeli citizens were evacuated from the holy site of the Western Wall on Monday after Hamas began to launch rockets. Lawmakers in the Knesset also canceled their session due to safety concerns.

'Deliberate provocatio­n'

Dr. Hanan Ashrawi, Palestinia­n leader, legislator and activist who served as an official spokespers­on of the Palestinia­n delegation to the Middle East peace process, told DW that Israel was deliberate­ly provoking Palestinia­ns.

"Israel has targeted the holy site. Israel has targeted the worshipper­s. And they were told that Israel is playing with fire, that they are provoking a situation of confrontat­ion. And they continued and they escalated."

"Israel has targeted the holy site. Israel has targeted the worshipper­s. And they were told that Israel is playing with fire, that they are provoking a situation of confrontat­ion. And they continued and they escalated."

She said the issue would not be resolved by simple compensati­on.

"Israel has been carrying out what we call demographi­c engineerin­g or ethnic cleansing in Jerusalem. It has been taking over Palestinia­n homes. It has been kicking Palestinia­ns out of their own homes, it has been demolishin­g Palestinia­n homes."

"So the issue is not evicting people and giving them compensati­on. The issue is that they want to get rid of Palestinia­ns and to cleanse the city of Palestinia­ns."

"Israel wants to see how far it can go in taking over Jerusalem and transformi­ng that character and exercising illegal sovereignt­y over Jerusalem."

ab/aw (AP, AFP, Reuters, dpa)

 ??  ?? The Al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem, one of the most important holy sites in Islam, is built on the sacred Jewish site of the Temple Mount
The Al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem, one of the most important holy sites in Islam, is built on the sacred Jewish site of the Temple Mount

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