Los Angeles Times

Israel angers Palestinia­ns by holding meeting at holy site

The Cabinet session in a tunnel near the Western Wall is seen as a provocatio­n.

- By Joshua Mitnick Mitnick is a special correspond­ent.

TEL AVIV — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu took the unusual step Sunday of convening his Cabinet at a sensitive Jerusalem holy site, spurring howls of protest by Palestinia­ns who claim the area where it is located for the capital of a future state.

The special session marking the 50th anniversar­y of Israel’s capture of East Jerusalem was held in a tunnel near the giant limestone blocks of the Western Wall, a place of reverence for Jews because of its proximity to where two ancient temples stood in biblical times — the holiest site in Judaism.

Palestinia­ns saw the meeting as a provocatio­n. Muslims consider the Western Wall part of the Noble Sanctuary, an esplanade that includes Al Aqsa Mosque, the third-holiest site in Islam.

After the 1967 Six-Day War, Israel annexed the Old City site along with all of East Jerusalem, a move that was never recognized by the internatio­nal community.

The area is a flashpoint for both sides. Netanyahu’s decision in 1996 to open a new tunnel entrance spurred days of violence in the West Bank that left about 100 Palestinia­ns and more than a dozen Israelis dead.

“Today’s meeting in occupied East Jerusalem is an attempt by the Israeli government to normalize occupation, oppression and colonizati­on over the land and people of Palestine,” Palestinia­n negotiator Saeb Erekat said in a statement.

The Cabinet session was the latest example of posturing by Netanyahu, who is under pressure from religious nationalis­t politician­s to be more proactive in asserting Israeli sovereignt­y in East Jerusalem and the West Bank.

Netanyahu pledged Sunday to plow more resources into developing the area around Jerusalem’s Old City and to build a cable car to improve access to the Western Wall.

“Following the destructio­n of the Second Temple, this spot was the focus of the longings of our people for generation­s,” Netanyahu said. “Thousands of years have passed, the Jewish people returned to their land, establishe­d a state and are now building its unified capital.”

If carried out, Israel’s plans could upset a delicate “status quo” in the Old City, said Ofer Zalzberg, an analyst at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group.

“Netanyahu is trying to respond to pressure from the religious right, which is asking, ‘Fifty years after capturing Jerusalem, what’s next?’ ” he said. “Palestinia­ns see this as the entire Israeli government saying, ‘Now we are just below the wall, but we want to push ahead.’ ”

Israeli celebratio­ns of the “reunificat­ion” of Jerusalem kicked off a week ago, with Netanyahu vowing at a festive ceremony that Israel would never relinquish control over the Old City.

The following day, President Trump became the first sitting U.S. president in more than a century to visit the Western Wall and the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, believed to mark the site of Jesus’ crucifixio­n.

Israelis viewed the gesture as tacit recognitio­n of their control over East Jerusalem, even though the White House declined a request for Netanyahu to join the president, in keeping with U.S. policy that the status of the Old City is a subject for peace negotiatio­ns.

 ?? Gali Tibbon Pool Photo ?? BENJAMIN NETANYAHU attends a special Cabinet meeting at a sensitive Jerusalem site to mark the 50th anniversar­y of Israel’s capture of East Jerusalem.
Gali Tibbon Pool Photo BENJAMIN NETANYAHU attends a special Cabinet meeting at a sensitive Jerusalem site to mark the 50th anniversar­y of Israel’s capture of East Jerusalem.

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