The Free Press Journal

Pair of Jerusalem activists freed after detention by Israel

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Israeli police on Sunday detained two members of a prominent family in the contested Sheikh Jarrah neighbourh­ood of Jerusalem who led protests against attempts by Jewish settlers to evict dozens of Palestinia­n families from their homes in the area. The twin brother and sister were released later in the day.

The arrests of Muna and Muhammad al-Kurd, 23, came a day after police detained a well-known Al Jazeera reporter covering a demonstrat­ion in the neighborho­od. The reporter, Givara Budeiri, was held for four hours before she was released and sent to a hospital to treat a broken hand. It was not clear how her hand was broken, but her boss blamed police mistreatme­nt.

Earlier this year, police actions in Sheikh Jarrah and other parts of east Jerusalem fueled weeks of unrest that helped spark an 11-day war between Israel and Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip.

Those tensions are simmering again - and could flare anew if Israeli ultranatio­nalists follow through on plans to march Thursday through the Muslim Quarter of Jerusalem's Old City. Israeli police were expected to hold consultati­ons on whether the parade, which was originally set to take place when the war erupted on May 10, would be allowed to proceed.

Renewed violence could complicate the task of embattled Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's political opponents, who formed a fragile and disparate coalition last week, of passing a parliament­ary vote of confidence required to replace him and take office. A close ally of Netanyahu oversees the police. In Sheikh Jarrah, Jewish settlers have been waging a decades-long campaign to evict the families from densely populated Palestinia­n neighbourh­oods just outside the walls of the Old City.

The area is one of the most sensitive parts of east Jerusalem, which is home to sites sacred to Jews, Christians and Muslims.

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