Los Angeles Times

Death toll up in Jerusalem unrest

Palestinia­ns and Israeli riot police clash again over the use of metal detectors at holy site.

- By Joshua Mitnick Mitnick is a special correspond­ent.

JERUSALEM — East Jerusalem continued to smolder Saturday after one of the worst days of Israeli-Palestinia­n unrest in years. Masked youths clashed with riot police on streets littered with stones hurled by rioters and shops were shuttered to protest violence that left three Palestinia­ns dead the day before and at least one more on Saturday evening.

Israel, meanwhile, identified the victims of a stabbing attack in the settlement of Halamish as 70-year-old Yosef Salomon, and his children, Chaya, 46, and Elad, 36. The three were killed by 19year-old Omer Abed, who sneaked into the settlement and burst into a family dinner at the start of the Jewish sabbath Friday evening, Israeli authoritie­s said.

“This was an act of terrorism committed by a beast incited by wild hatred,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said in a statement Saturday night.

The casualties on both sides were fallout from an escalating dispute over Israel’s placement of metal detectors at the entrance to a complex that includes Al Aqsa Mosque, touching off a political crisis and violence that some fear might morph into a prolonged uprising against Israel.

Palestinia­ns returned to the Lions Gate outside Jerusalem’s Old City to worship and demonstrat­e against Israel’s deployment of metal detectors outside a plaza holy to Muslim and Jews. Israeli police barricades kept men about a football field away from the outer wall of the Old City, and dozens of men and women loitered waiting for evening prayers while children passed out water bottles and pastries.

With a green-and-yellow prayer rug draped over his shoulder, Khalil Yassin pulled back his sleeves to reveal black and blue marks that he said were inf licted by police during Friday’s clashes.

“Yesterday, they kicked me,” said the 21-year-old building worker. “I’m coming here every day — and every day our numbers are increasing. We are not scared of anything. I only want to go to the mosque and pray.”

Standing with two other young men, Yassin insisted that the demonstrat­ions would go on for weeks until the removal of the metal detectors, which he said are an imposition on worshipers and intrusive for female worshipers.

But Palestinia­ns also say the metal detectors represent a unilateral move by Israel to assert its sovereignt­y at the sacred complex, known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary, and curtail Muslim worship. Palestinia­ns say they fear Israel’s government will bow to demands by Israeli rightwinge­rs to revoke a ban on Jewish prayer at the site. They fear they will have to share the esplanade with Jewish worshipers, just as they share the Tomb of the Patriarchs holy site in the West Bank city of Hebron.

“As long as Aqsa is besieged, our young men will not move from outside the gate,” said Mahmoud abu Ghanem, whose nephew, Mohammed, was shot dead Friday by Israeli police amid a crowd of stone-throwing youths in the Mount of Olives neighborho­od.

Abu Ghanem was sitting at a mourning tent outside the family’s house in East Jerusalem, as hundreds of mourners paid their respects and a cleric delivered an incendiary sermon over the explosions of firecracke­rs just a few blocks away.

“These bursts are boosting the morale of youth,” Sheik Ahmed Amra said over a loudspeake­r. “Congratula­tions to the family of the martyr. Your son died for Al Aqsa.”

The uncle agreed. “It is worth it for Mohammed to be a martyr. We should all be martyrs. As long as Al Aqsa is besieged, nothing will calm down.”

Just a few minutes’ drive away in the predominan­tly Jewish neighborho­od of French Hill, the clashes seemed far away. Two Israeli sisters waiting to catch a bus said they were not scared by the unrest, but expressed hope that both sides find a way to defuse tensions.

“I don’t feel the tension. I feel safe in this neighborho­od,” said Miri Lupovich, 28. “The government needs to lower the flames. The metal detectors aren’t the problem. Both sides are exploiting this to their own political advantage.”

Israeli officials said the metal detectors became necessary after three gunmen ambushed and killed two policemen guarding the Jerusalem holy site. They accuse the Palestinia­ns of whipping up religious sentiment over the metal detectors and Al Aqsa, and insist that anyone who wants to worship there can do so.

“No one’s right to pray on the Temple Mount is being violated. The inspection­s for dangerous materials are being conducted respectful­ly,” said Michael Oren, a deputy minister in Netanyahu’s government, in a conference call with reporters. “The Waqf and [the militant group] Hamas have transforme­d this self-defense mechanism into a religious offense.” The Waqf is Jordan’s Islamic authority that manages the Jerusalem holy site.

The Palestinia­n fatality on Saturday occurred amid clashes with security forces in the West Bank town of Azariya, just east of Jerusalem’s border, according to the Palestinia­n Red Crescent Society. A spokeswoma­n for the Israeli army denied soldiers were responsibl­e, and said the Palestinia­n died when a homemade explosive accidental­ly detonated.

Teams of Israeli border police set up at the main intersecti­ons in the hillside neighborho­ods to the east of the Old City. Some roads to the Old City were blocked. At dusk, a burst of stun grenades and clouds of tear gas went off amid evening prayers at the Lions Gate. Streets that had been clogged with cars en route to the prayers turned into empty no man’s land as the night’s clashes got underway.

Standing in front of closed shops just a few feet from a group of border police, Wissam Sayyad said he had stayed home from work for the last week. No one was working, he said.

“The mood is demoralizi­ng. It’s oppressive,” he said. The 28-year-old gardener accused Arab government­s and Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas of ignoring the situation at the Muslim holy sites. “No one here is supporting Al Aqsa. Abbas isn’t supporting Aqsa and the Arab countries aren’t. We are the only ones.”

 ?? Ahmad Gharabli AFP/Getty Images ?? A PALESTINIA­N grieves as mourners carry the body of Mohammed abu Ghanem, who was shot by Israeli police, in East Jerusalem.
Ahmad Gharabli AFP/Getty Images A PALESTINIA­N grieves as mourners carry the body of Mohammed abu Ghanem, who was shot by Israeli police, in East Jerusalem.
 ?? Mohammed Abed AFP/Getty Images ?? A PROTESTER lobs a stone at Israeli forces near the border fence east of the Jabaliya refugee camp.
Mohammed Abed AFP/Getty Images A PROTESTER lobs a stone at Israeli forces near the border fence east of the Jabaliya refugee camp.

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