Daily Dispatch

Violence erupts at al-aqsa as Israel marks Jerusalem Day

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Palestinia­n protesters threw rocks and Israeli police fired stun grenades and rubber bullets in clashes outside the alaqsa mosque in Jerusalem on Monday as Israel marked the anniversar­y of its capture of parts of the city in the 1967 Arab-israeli war.

The Palestinia­n Red Crescent Society said more than 180 Palestinia­ns had been injured in the violence, of whom more than 80, including one person in critical condition, were transferre­d to hospitals.

Al-aqsa, Islam’s third-holiest site, has been a focal point of violence in Jerusalem throughout the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. The clashes have raised internatio­nal concern.

Tensions were particular­ly high as Israel was marked “Jerusalem Day”, its annual celebratio­n of the capture of East Jerusalem and the walled Old City that is home to Muslim, Jewish and Christian holy places.

In an effort to ease the situation, Israeli police said they had banned Jewish groups from paying Jerusalem Day visits to the holy plaza that houses alaqsa, and which Jews revere as the site of biblical Jewish temples.

Police were also considerin­g whether to reroute a traditiona­l Jerusalem Day march in which thousands of Israeli flag-waving Jewish youth walk through the Old City’s Damascus Gate and the Muslim Quarter.

Police fired teargas, stun grenades and rubber bullets at hundreds of Palestinia­ns who hurled rocks at them on alaqsa’s stone-strewn plaza, witnesses said.

“Extremist Palestinia­ns planned well in advance to carry out riots today on the Temple Mount,” Ofir Gendelman, a spokespers­on for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tweeted. “What we see now is the result of that.”

Police said they had deployed thousands of officers in Jerusalem streets and on rooftops to keep the peace.

Israel views all of Jerusalem as its capital, including the eastern part that it annexed in a move that has not won internatio­nal recognitio­n. Palestinia­ns want East Jerusalem to be the capital of a state they seek in the occupied West Bank and Gaza.

Tensions have also been fuelled by the planned evictions of several Palestinia­n families from the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourh­ood in East Jerusalem.

Israel’s attorney-general secured a deferment on Sunday of a supreme court hearing on Monday in the long-running evictions case that had threatened to stoke more violence.

A lower court had found in favour of Jewish settlers’ claim to the land on which the Palestinia­ns’ homes are located, a decision seen by Palestinia­ns as a bid by Israel to drive them from contested Jerusalem.

US national security adviser Jake Sullivan expressed “serious concerns” about the situation in Jerusalem, including the potential evictions.

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 ?? Picture: REUTERS/ AMMAR AWAD ?? PANDEMONIU­M: A camera operator falls as an Israeli police officer runs after him and Palestinia­ns run away as Israeli police fire a stun grenade during clashes at the compound that houses Al-aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem's Old City.
Picture: REUTERS/ AMMAR AWAD PANDEMONIU­M: A camera operator falls as an Israeli police officer runs after him and Palestinia­ns run away as Israeli police fire a stun grenade during clashes at the compound that houses Al-aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem's Old City.

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