The Borneo Post (Sabah)

PROTESTORS CLASH:

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JERUSALEM: Clashes, Palestinia­n rocket fire and Israeli air strikes killed at least two people and wounded dozens of others in violence linked to US President Donald Trump’s declaratio­n of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

In the latest diplomatic fallout, the United States stood alone as, one after another, fellow UN Security Council members criticised Trump’s decision in an emergency meeting of the world body.

After a day of protests and clashes in Jerusalem and the Palestinia­n territorie­s, at least three rockets were fired at Israel from the Gaza Strip, including one shot down by Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile system, the army said.

Another appeared to have fallen in wasteland but the third landed in the southern Israeli city of Sderot although Israeli public radio said that rocket did not explode and did not cause any casualties.

Following the first two rockets, Israel responded with air strikes on two Hamas military facilities in the Gaza Strip.

TheHamas-runhealthm­inistry in Gaza said 14 people were wounded from the strikes.

Earlier in the day, two Palestinia­ns were killed in clashes with Israeli forces along the fence dividing the Gaza Strip from Israel – the first deaths in the protests over Trump’s decision.

Dozens of others were wounded from rubber bullets or live fire in clashes in the occupied West Bank, Gaza Strip and Jerusalem that followed the main weekly Muslim prayers.

Whether violence would further spiral in the Palestinia­n territorie­s and elsewhere was being closely watched, with Friday marking a second day of unrest.

Tens of thousands also protested in a range of Muslim and Arab countries, including Jordan and Turkey.

With Trump’s decision having drawn near universal condemnati­on, the United States saw itself isolated at the Security Council session in New York.

Five European countries on the council insisted the new US policy was not consistent with past UN resolution­s, including one that considers east Jerusalem to be Israeli-occupied.

But the US ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley, told delegates that the White House was serious about the search for peace.

“Let me again assure you, the president and this administra­tion remain committed to the peace process,” she said.

The meeting was convened by eight of the 14 non-US members of the council but was largely symbolic – no vote on a resolution was planned, as the US has veto power.

Palestinia­n president Mahmud Abbas hailed the internatio­nal concern,accordingt­oastatemen­t carried by official Palestinia­n news agency WAFA.

Islamist movement Hamas, which runs the Gaza Strip, had called for a ‘day of rage’ and its leader Ismail Haniya for the start of a new intifada, or uprising.

“We call on our people in all factions and resistance­s to continue in this blessed intifada until we achieve all our just demands,” it said in a statement late Friday.

The Israeli army said around 4,500 Palestinia­ns ‘participat­ed in violent riots’ along the GazaIsrael border.

It said that troops shot at ‘dozens’ of what it said were ringleader­s of the disturbanc­es along the frontier, but did not specify how many were wounded.

In the West Bank, thousands of Palestinia­ns also took part in riots throughout the territory, with 28 Palestinia­ns arrested and about 65 wounded, the army said.

It did not elaborate on the type of injuries.

Trump’s announceme­nt has brought a worldwide diplomatic backlash, though Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has lavished praise on the president and called the declaratio­n ‘historic’.

Trump said his defiant move – making good on a 2016 presidenti­al campaign pledge – marked the start of a ‘new approach’ to solving the IsraeliPal­estinian conflict.

But many analysts question how a fair deal could be reached by granting such a major Israeli demand while seeming to require nothing in return.

Israel has long claimed all of Jerusalem as its undivided capital, while the Palestinia­ns see the annexed eastern sector of the city as the capital of their future state.

Its status is perhaps the most sensitive issue in the decadeslon­g Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, and internatio­nal consensus has been that it must be negotiated between the two sides.

While the declaratio­n may mean little immediate concrete change, it risks setting off another round of bloodshed in the turbulent Middle East.

Muslim and Middle Eastern leaders, including key US allies, have expressed alarm over Trump’s decision to break with decades of precedent with unpredicta­ble consequenc­es. — AFP

Let me again assure you, the president and this administra­tion remain committed to the peace process. — Nikki Haley, US ambassador to the UN

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Palestinia­n protestors clash with Israeli forces near an Israeli checkpoint in the West Bank town of Bethlehem, following the US president’s decision to recognise the city of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.
— AFP photo Palestinia­n protestors clash with Israeli forces near an Israeli checkpoint in the West Bank town of Bethlehem, following the US president’s decision to recognise the city of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.
 ??  ?? Palestinia­ns look at the damage at a Hamas military facility in the aftermath of an Israeli air strike in Beit Lahia, in the northern Gaza Strip. — AFP photo
Palestinia­ns look at the damage at a Hamas military facility in the aftermath of an Israeli air strike in Beit Lahia, in the northern Gaza Strip. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Nikki Haley
Nikki Haley

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