Oman Daily Observer

Palestinia­ns pray outside holy site after Israeli restrictio­ns

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JERUSALEM: The main prayer session at Jerusalem’s Al Aqsa mosque ended relatively calmly on Friday after Israel removed tougher security measures that prompted two weeks of violent Palestinia­n protest, though it barred entrance to men under age 50.

But tensions remained high and more serious violence erupted in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and in the Gaza Strip.

Extra police stood guard throughout Jerusalem’s walled Old City, some wearing riot gear, some on horseback, in anticipati­on of mass protests even after Israel bowed to internatio­nal pressure and removed metal detectors outside Al Aqsa.

But only brief, isolated clashes between Palestinia­n protesters and Israeli police took place, without serious violence.

Bloodier confrontat­ions occurred outside Jerusalem.

Palestinia­ns in the Gaza Strip gathered near the border with Israel, waving flags, chanting slogans and throwing stones, locals said.

A 16-year-old was shot dead by Israeli troops, Palestinia­n health officials said. Six others were injured.

An Israeli military spokeswoma­n said dozens of people had gathered in “violent riots”, also rolling burning tires at the border fence.

When warning shots in the air did not stop them, the spokeswoma­n said, “shots were fired towards the main instigator­s”.

In the West Bank, a man armed with a knife charged at Israeli soldiers and was shot dead, the military said.

Throughout Friday Israel limited entry to the mosque compound, a raised marble-and-stone plaza referred to by Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and by Jews as the Temple Mount, to men over the age of 50. Women of all ages were allowed in. Tensions soared at the venue, often erupting into fierce clashes, after two Israeli police officers were shot dead on July 14 by gunmen who had hidden weapons inside the Aqsa compound, prompting Israel to install metal detectors at the entrance to the site.

A Muslim boycott ensued.

Under immense diplomatic pressure Israel removed the metal detectors on Thursday, a move welcomed by the Arab world, but disturbanc­es quickly resumed when thousands of Muslim worshipper­s surged back into the mosque.

A few thousand people made their way to Al Aqsa for Friday prayers, police said, while a younger crowd remained outside and worshipped in narrow side streets.

When the prayer session ended those congregate­d left the area peacefully, for the most part.

Television footage showed a few brief confrontat­ions involving a group of Palestinia­ns, a number of them throwing bottles, and police dispersing them with stun grenades.

There remained a risk of conflict over evening prayers, however.

Israel captured East Jerusalem, including the Old City and the holy compound, in the 1967 Middle East war.

It annexed the that has never internatio­nally.

Al Aqsa mosque, Islam’s third holiest shrine, sits on a tree-lined plateau in the heart of the Old City. area been in a move recognised

 ?? — AFP ?? Protesters push a burning tyre during clashes between demonstrat­ors and Israeli security forces in the city of Hebron.
— AFP Protesters push a burning tyre during clashes between demonstrat­ors and Israeli security forces in the city of Hebron.
 ?? — AFP ?? Israeli border guards keep watch as Palestinia­n Muslim worshipper­s pray outside Jerusalem’s Old City on Friday.
— AFP Israeli border guards keep watch as Palestinia­n Muslim worshipper­s pray outside Jerusalem’s Old City on Friday.

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