The Jerusalem Post

Erdogan ‘strongly condemns’ Israel over al-Aqsa

Egyptian President Sisi’s son reportedly in Jerusalem to mediate between Israel, Palestinia­ns

- • By LAHAV HARKOV Tzvi Joffre contribute­d to this report.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan condemned Israel for its actions against rioters on the Temple Mount on Sunday, as Ankara seeks a path to closer relations with Jerusalem.

Following a phone call with Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, Erdogan tweeted that they “were having a sad Ramadan due to what happened in Palestine, especially in Jerusalem.”

“I strongly condemn Israel’s interventi­ons against the worshipper­s in al-Aqsa Mosque and... we will stand against the provocatio­ns and threats against the status and spirituali­ty of al-Aqsa Mosque,” Erdogan tweeted. “Turkey is always on the side of Palestine. The events remind us of the necessity for all Palestinia­n groups to work toward unity and reconcilia­tion.”

Erdogan had refrained from commenting on the rioting and policing on the Temple Mount in recent days, which came amid a recent rapprochem­ent between Turkey and Israel.

A source involved in the warming Israel-Turkey ties had been in touch with senior officials in Ankara to discourage Erdogan from making the kinds of angry statements he had often made about Israel in the last decade, especially on the issue of Jerusalem, such as calling Israeli soldiers and police murderers.

As a result, the remarks were comparable to those of Arab states with which Israel has establishe­d peace.

Egypt’s Foreign Ministry called on Saturday for “self-restraint, providing full protection for Muslim worshipper­s and allowing them to perform Islamic rituals in al-Aqsa

Mosque, which is an Islamic endowment purely for Muslims.”

Mahmoud el-Sisi, son of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, arrived in Jerusalem with two other officials from Cairo on Sunday, in an attempt to mediate between Israeli and Palestinia­n factions, the London-based news site Al-Araby Al-Jadeed reported. The Jerusalem Post was unable to independen­tly verify the report.

The UAE also “strongly condemned... Israeli forces’ storming of al-Aqsa Mosque.”

Morocco’s Foreign Ministry said the “blatant attack and systematic provocatio­n during the holy month of Ramadan... will stoke hatred and extremism and undermine chances to revive the peace process in the region.”

Jordan’s King Abdullah II on Sunday afternoon stressed the need for Israel to respect the “historical and legal status-quo at al-Aqsa Mosque/al-Haram al-Sharif and cease all illegal and provocativ­e measures that violate it and could push toward further escalation.”

The Jordanian monarch directed his government to continue regional and internatio­nal efforts and communicat­ions to “stop Israeli escalation­s.”

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