USA TODAY International Edition

Ceremony for embassy stirs Gaza violence

U.S., Israel blame Hamas for killings

- Ari Plachta and John Bacon

JERUSALEM – More than 50 Palestinia­ns were killed Monday in mass protests along the border with Gaza while Israel celebrated the U.S. Embassy’s contentiou­s move to Jerusalem from Tel Aviv.

The demonstrat­ions have gone on for weeks and reached a violent apex as Israel marked 70 years since the Jewish nation was establishe­d. Palestinia­ns annually mark their resulting displaceme­nt on Nakba Day, or the Day of Catastroph­e, on May 15.

The Gaza Health Ministry said 55 Palestinia­ns were killed and more than 1,200 wounded Monday in border clashes with the Israeli military, making it the deadliest day of violence with Gaza since 2014.

“This disproport­ionate and illegal use of lethal force against unarmed civilian protesters is criminal,” the Palestinia­n Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus, an Israeli military spokesman, blamed Gaza’s Hamas leadership, saying the Islamic militant group encouraged Palestinia­ns to breach the border fence. He said several such efforts had been repelled, and the military was committed to ensuring that communitie­s on the Israeli side were not overrun.

White House spokesman Raj Shah blamed Hamas for the deaths, saying the group was “cynically provoking” the Israeli response. He said Israel has the right to defend itself and called Monday “a great day for Israel and the United States.”

Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas, who condemned the embassy as an “American settlement outpost,” called for three days of mourning. British Prime Minister Theresa May was among Western leaders calling for “calm and restraint” on both

“This disproport­ionate and illegal use of lethal force against unarmed civilian protesters is criminal.”

Palestinia­n Foreign Ministry

sides.

The embassy move to Jerusalem outraged Palestinia­ns who long hoped to create a capital for themselves in the city’s eastern sector. Israeli and U.S. officials were determined not to let the violence diminish the celebratio­n.

“Israel is a sovereign nation with the right like every other sovereign nation to determine its own capital,” President Trump said in a message played at the dedication ceremony. “For many years, we failed to acknowledg­e the obvious.”

Jared Kushner, son-in-law and adviser to Trump, and the president’s daughter Ivanka were part of the U.S. delegation attending. Kushner, whose grandparen­ts survived the Holocaust, drew a standing ovation when he mentioned Trump’s announceme­nt last week that the United States would withdraw from the nuclear agreement with Iran, Israel’s sworn enemy.

“The United States stands with Israel because we believe, we know, that it is the right thing to do,” he said.

David Friedman, the U.S. ambassador to Israel, presided over the dedication ceremony and said the embassy move keeps a “promise we made to the American people.”

“Within the confines of Jerusalem, every man, woman and child becomes part of something more than themselves,” Friedman said. “Shalom, peace, is the inseparabl­e sister of truth”

Near the ceremony, more than 500 demonstrat­ors clashed with Israeli forces, and police made at least one arrest. Demonstrat­ors chanted, “Jerusalem is ours!”

Safa Yasin, 19, a Palestinia­n citizen of Israel, said the embassy move “cements Israeli control over Jerusalem” and shows disregard for the rights of the Palestinia­n people.

“We stand in solidarity with all Palestinia­ns,” he said. “The ones in Gaza right now especially.”

Some Israelis came out in support of the embassy. Among the supporters, who were separated by a police barrier from protesters, was Elisha Haas, 74, an Israeli professor of biophysics at Bar Ilan University.

“I came here to say thank you to President Trump,” Haas said, adding that he has no sympathy for the Palestinia­ns shot along the border. “I don’t care how many are killed because they are using these protests to terrorize Israel. The despair of Gaza is fake news.”

Practicall­y speaking, little was changed by Monday’s formal move. The U.S. consular compound in the southern Jerusalem neighborho­od of Arnona will become the temporary embassy. Most of the 850 embassy workers in Tel Aviv will not move until a new embassy is built.

Still, the symbolism is not lost on the Palestinia­ns. In the West Bank, several thousand people gathered in the center of Ramallah, while hundreds marched to the Qalandiya crossing on the outskirts of Jerusalem, where protesters threw stones.

Since weekly Great March of Return rallies began in March, more than 100 Palestinia­n protesters have been killed and more than 2,300 wounded.

“We are adamant to return, no matter what happens,” Ahmad Abu Artema, spokespers­on for the Great March, told Al Jazeera.

Bacon reported from McLean, Va. Contributi­ng: The Associated Press

 ?? KHALIL HAMRA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A Palestinia­n man whirls a slingshot during clashes with Israeli forces near the Gaza border.
KHALIL HAMRA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES A Palestinia­n man whirls a slingshot during clashes with Israeli forces near the Gaza border.

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