Toronto Star

Islamic leaders urge boycott of holy site

Metal detectors installed at gates to shared compound in Israel after police killed

- IAN DEITCH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

JERUSALEM— Islamic leaders called on Muslims on Monday to boycott a Jerusalem holy site at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict in a gesture of protest after Israel set up metal detectors at its entrance gates following a deadly Arab attack there last week.

For the first time in decades, Israel closed the site — sacred to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and to Jews as the Temple Mount — on Friday, after three Arab Muslim Israeli citi- zens opened fire from the holy compound with automatic weapons, killing two police officers before they were shot and killed.

Israel reopened the compound to Muslim worshipper­s on Sunday after imposing new security measures, including metal detectors and additional security cameras.

The Waqf, Jordan’s Islamic authority that manages religious affairs at the site, was outraged over the metal detectors.

Police said Monday evening that about 200 Palestinia­ns tried to block a road nearby and threw stones at officers who dispersed them. A day earlier, minor scuffles broke out as some Muslim worshipper­s tried to stop others from using the gates, Is- raeli media reported.

Police said that despite the tensions, hundreds of worshipper­s had entered the compound.

The Waqf, together with other Islamic groups, issued a statement Monday calling on Muslims “to reject and boycott all the Israeli aggression measures, including changing the historical status quo including imposing the metal detectors.”

They called on the faithful “not to enter the mosque through” the detectors. The statement further said that “if the metal detectors continue to be imposed, we call upon the people to pray in front of the gates of the mosque and in the streets of Jerusalem.”

The fate of the compound is an emotional issue and forms the centrepiec­e of rival Israeli and Palestinia­n national narratives. Any perceived changes to the delicate arrangemen­ts at the site can spark tensions. Its closure after Friday’s attack prompted condemnati­ons from the Arab world.

Jordan called for its immediate reopening and there were protests in the streets of the capital Amman against Israel, with which it has a peace treaty.

Jews revere the site, where the two Jewish temples stood in biblical times, as the Temple Mount.

Also home to the Al-Aqsa Mosque and Dome of the Rock, it is Islam’s third-holiest site after Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia.

 ?? AHMAD GHARABLIAH­MAD/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Israeli border guards detain a Palestinia­n youth during a demonstrat­ion outside the Lions Gate, a main entrance to the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound.
AHMAD GHARABLIAH­MAD/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Israeli border guards detain a Palestinia­n youth during a demonstrat­ion outside the Lions Gate, a main entrance to the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound.

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