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‘Silence is not an option’

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ADNAN, a Palestinia­n from east Jerusalem, vowed that rubber bullets fired by Israeli police would not deter him: “Silence is not an option” in defence of Arabs in the Holy City, he said.

East Jerusalem, the majority Palestinia­n part of the city annexed by Israel in 1967, has been hit by some of its worst unrest in years.

Hundreds of Palestinia­ns have been wounded and dozens arrested in confrontat­ions with police who have been hit with stones and other projectile­s hurled by mainly young and male Palestinia­n protesters, who have also torched cars and dumpsters.

Friday night saw violent clashes following evening Ramadaan prayers at the Al-aqsa mosque compound, Islam’s third holiest site, a flashpoint area also sacred to Jews – who call it the Temple Mount – where tensions trigger swift global alarm.

For 20 year-old-adnan, who like many Palestinia­ns in east Jerusalem refused to give his name for fear of Israeli police retributio­n, protesters are responding to what he said was as a persistent effort by Jewish settlers to expel them from the city.

“We are here, in the street, to say that we are not going leave,” he told AFP.

“For years, settlers have attacked us and taken our land but silence is no longer an option.”

Several events have triggered the flare-up in east Jerusalem, which Palestinia­ns claim as the capital of their future state.

Protester Mohammed, who also refused to give his last name, argued that each incident was linked to an unavoidabl­e reality facing Palestinia­ns in the city.

“The Israelis want us to work for them, but they don’t want us to live here,” he said.

Earlier this year, an Israeli court ruled in favour of Jewish settlers seeking to evict Palestinia­n families from their homes in the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourh­ood, just north of the Old City.

The court said the Jewish families had proven a decades-old claim to the land, infuriatin­g Palestinia­ns and triggering months of protests that have intensifie­d in recent nights.

Other incidents have fanned the flames.

Last month, Israeli police closed the staired plaza outside the Old City’s Damascus Gate, a traditiona­l gathering spot for Palestinia­ns following evening Ramadaan evening prayers.

The closure triggered violent clashes with police who removed the barricades after several nights of unrest.

Next came the clashes at the Al-aqsa plaza following Ramadaan’s final Friday prayers, which wounded more than 200 people.

Police said they were responding to projectile­s hurled by “thousands” of rioters.

Mohammed said he was among thousands of people at Al-aqsa who were breaking the fast, eating a date and drinking water, “when the police starting attacking us”.

Prayers at Al-aqsa on Saturday for Laylat al-qadr (Night of Destiny), a peak of Ramadaan believed to be the night when the Koran was revealed to the Prophet Mohammed, were largely peacefully.

But the unrest persisted in Sheikh Jarrah, where hostilitie­s could heighten further in the days ahead, depending on the Supreme Court’s next moves.

The court could decide, as early as Monday, whether the Palestinia­n families facing eviction can appeal the lower court ruling.

“The Sheikh Jarrah case is the case for all of Palestine,” said Malak Orok, 23, who was demonstrat­ing Saturday with friends in Jerusalem.

“Today it is them (the four families). Tomorrow it will be us.”

The area has for years been focal point of intense real-estate battles between well-funded Jewish settler organisati­ons and Palestinia­ns.

Far-right Israeli lawmaker Itamar Ben-gvir has embroiled himself in the crisis, visiting Sheikh Jarrah to declare that its houses belong to Jews and called on police to “open fire” on protesters.

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