Arab Times

Palestinia­ns pray outside holy site

Israel bars men under 50

-

JERUSALEM, July 29, (AFP): Israel barred men under 50 from Friday prayers at a sensitive Jerusalem holy site after two weeks of tensions and deadly unrest, leading thousands of Palestinia­ns to hold mass prayers outside.

Thousands of others entered the Haram al-Sharif compound, known to Jews as the Temple Mount, for prayers after Palestinia­ns ended a boycott of the site the previous day.

Despite fears of violent clashes around the compound, which includes Al-Aqsa mosque and the Dome of the Rock, the area was largely calm following Friday’s midday prayers.

Shouted

Dozens of young Palestinia­ns shouted and protested near one entrance to the compound and minor scuffles broke out with police.

Clashes did however erupt between Israeli forces and Palestinia­ns in parts of the occupied West Bank, including in the Nablus, Bethlehem and Hebron areas, the Israeli army said.

A Palestinia­n also tried to stab soldiers at a junction in the West Bank and was shot dead by Israeli forces, the army said.

And Israeli troops shot dead a Palestinia­n teenager and wounded seven others during clashes near the border fence in Gaza, Palestinia­n authoritie­s there said.

The Palestinia­n Red Crescent said 225 Palestinia­ns were wounded, including at least 87 from live or rubber bullets.

Tensions at the holy site were high -- even after thousands of worshipper­s returned to the compound Thursday, ending a boycott over new security measures set up following an attack that killed two policemen.

The outside prayers on Friday were due to the Israeli age restrictio­ns and were not the start of a new boycott, after Israel removed the security measures this week.

By the evening, the gates to the mosque compound were open and Palestinia­ns of all ages were allowed

case which involves a total of 68 defendants.

The attack, which killed six police officers, followed the deadly dispersal by security forces in Aug 2013 of two Cairo sit-in protests staged by supporters of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi, ousted a month earlier by the military after one in without any restrictio­ns, an Israeli police spokesman and a Palestinia­n official said.

Police earlier barred men under the age of 50 from praying amid fears of disturbanc­es.

Roads around Jerusalem’s Old City, where the mosque compound is located, were closed and some 3,500 police were deployed. Police said people who tried to stay inside Al-Aqsa mosque overnight were removed.

“It is a cowardly act,” Amjad Hassoun, a young man from Jerusalem, said of the age restrictio­n.

At least 187 people were wounded inside the mosque compound and in adjacent areas as clashes erupted on Thursday, the Red Crescent said. Police said stones were thrown at officers.

Amnesty Internatio­nal said Israeli security forces fired “stun grenades, tear gas and sponge-tipped bullets into a peaceful crowd” at an entrance to the compound.

Tensions

The United States lauded “the efforts undertaken to de-escalate tensions in Jerusalem”.

Jordan, the custodian of Jerusalem’s Muslim holy sites, welcomed the removal of the security measures but said Israel should not provoke Palestinia­ns there.

“Unless Israel acts responsibl­y, then we’ll be facing another crisis that will push us all towards the abyss,” Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi said.

Deadly unrest had erupted in the days after the new measures were introduced, with clashes breaking out around the compound, and in the West Bank, leaving six Palestinia­ns dead.

A Palestinia­n also broke into a home in a Jewish settlement in the West Bank and stabbed four Israelis on July 21, killing three of them.

Israel removed the metal detectors on Tuesday after intense internatio­nal diplomacy.

Newly installed railings and scaffoldin­g where cameras were previously

year in office. (AP)

Abbas in good health:

Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas, 82, underwent a checkup at a West Bank hospital on Saturday and his doctors said the results

Palestinia­n relatives of 16-year-old Abed Hussian Abu Hasimeh, who was shot dead by Israeli during clashes, cry during his funeral in the Bureij refugee camp in central Gaza on July 28. Israeli gtroops shod dead a Palestinia­n teenager and wounded seven others during clashes near the border fence in Gaza, Palestinia­n authoritie­s in the enclave said. (AFP)

mounted were also removed on Thursday.

The removal was seen as a defeat for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who had ordered the security measures and was forced to backtrack after warnings the unrest could spiral out of control. It represente­d a rare victory for Palestinia­ns, who remained united in their boycott.

Israeli officials said they were to replace the new security measures with “advanced technologi­es” -- widely believed to be smart cameras with facial recognitio­n technology.

The holy compound lies in east Jerusalem, seized by Israel in the Six-Day War of 1967 and later annexed in a move never recognised by the internatio­nal community.

The third-holiest site for Muslims and the most sacred for Jews, it is at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict and has served as a rallying cry for Palestinia­ns.

In 2000, a visit to the compound by then Israeli opposition leader Ariel Sharon helped ignite the second Palestinia­n intifada, or uprising.

Jordan will not allow the return of Israel’s ambassador until the shooting of two Jordanians by an embassy security guard has been properly investigat­ed, a government official said on Friday.

“Jordan will not allow ambassador Einat Shlein or the rest of the embassy staff to return until a thorough investigat­ion has been opened” into Sunday’s shooting, the official said, adding Jordan informed Israel of its decision.

Israel’s foreign ministry late Friday said it had launched a “verificati­on procedure” into the shooting.

Israel’s attorney general “gave instructio­ns to implicated (Israeli) bodies to provide all elements in their possession concerning the incident”, a ministry spokesman said in a statement.

“Israel will inform Jordan of developmen­ts and informatio­n gathered during this procedure,” the spokesman said, without providing further details.

were good.

Abbas underwent routine checks, including blood tests and X-rays at the private Al Istishari Hospital near the West Bank town of Ramallah, and left after 90 minutes, said the hospital director, Dr Fathi Abu Mughli.

“The results are good,” Abu Mughli told The Associated Press, but did not elaborate.

Abbas was flanked by aides and smiling when he left the hospital.

Abbas has suffered heart problems in the past, but his doctors have said he is fine. A year ago, Abbas underwent an emergency heart procedure after suffering exhaustion and chest pains. (AP)

7 journalist­s freed:

Seven staff members of an opposition newspaper were released from a Turkish jail early Saturday pending the outcome of their trial on charges of allegedly aiding terror organizati­ons.

A court ruled for the release of Cumhuriyet newspaper’s cartoonist Musa Kart and six others Friday, but ordered four others to remain held.

The daily newspaper is staunchly opposed to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and is one of the few remaining outlets in Turkey critical of the government. A total of 19 defendants went on trial Monday for allegedly aiding several outlawed organizati­ons, including Kurdish militants, a far-left group and the network of U.S.-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, who the government blames for a failed coup last year. (AP)

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait