Saturday Star

Holy site closure inflames tension

Palestinia­n leader condemns Israeli action as a declaratio­n of war

- BEN LYNFIELD

GRAVE deteriorat­ion in Israeli-Palestinia­n relations threatened to spin out of control after the Palestinia­n President, Mahmoud Abbas, accused Israel of making a “declaratio­n of war” by closing al-Aqsa mosque compound to Jews and Muslims alike.

The first closure of the compound in Jerusalem – Islam’s third-holiest site – in 14 years followed the fatal shooting of the 32-year-old Palestinia­n Moataz Hijazi, who was suspected of attempting to kill a Jewish activist.

Israeli authoritie­s explained the closure of the shrine area, known to Jews as the Temple Mount and revered as the site of two ancient temples, as a necessary security step. But Palestinia­ns viewed the move as further confirmati­on of their suspicions that Israel was seeking to alter the status quo in the ultrasensi­tive area and is endangerin­g the mosque.

“This dangerous Israeli escalation is a declaratio­n of war on the Palestinia­n people and its sacred places and on the Arab and Islamic nation,” Nabil Abu Rudeina, Abbas’s spokesman, was quoted as saying. “This decision is a dangerous act and blatant challenge that will lead to more tensions and instabilit­y.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s spokesman, Mark Regev, responded that Israel was “steadfast that we will not allow any change in the status quo at the site”.

“What we need is not inflammato­ry rhetoric but responsibl­e leadership to try to calm things down,” he said.

“Israel was compelled to take this step to reduce tension and we hope it will be possible very soon to re-establish calm so that there can be worship in

Afreedom and safety.”

Senior Israeli police officers were deliberati­ng over whether to reopen the site, with restrictio­ns, for yesterday’s mosque prayers. That looked increasing­ly likely. But that move alone will not be enough to dissipate tensions in Jerusalem, which were escalating even before the shooting in the chest and stomach of the US-born activist, Yehuda Glick, whose life was still in danger yesterday after surgery, according to doctors.

Glick campaigned for Jewish prayer at the holy site, which is prohibited. Ever since a Palestinia­n teenager, Mohammed Abu Khdeir, was brutally murdered in June in a revenge attack for the killing of three Israeli teens, there have been nightly clashes between stone-throwing youths and police in Silwan, Isawiya and other suburbs of East Jerusalem.

Last week, two Israelis were killed, one of them a threemonth-old baby, in a car attack by a Palestinia­n on pedestrian­s at a railway station.

Yossi Alpher, former director of the Jaffee Centre for Strategic Studies, said Glick’s shooting was “an escalatory event that isn’t over”.

“The question really is: ‘Can the two sides restrain their extremists or are they not interested in doing so?’

“When Abbas declares this is a declaratio­n of war it seems he is not interested in doing so. And Netanyahu is pandering to his own right wing so I’m not sure he has an interest in doing so either.”

Visits by right-wing Israelis to the al-Aqsa compound, growing assertiven­ess by right-wing Israeli politician­s to enact legislatio­n for Jewish prayer on the Temple Mount, and restrictio­ns on access by Palestinia­n worshipper­s, layered onto longstandi­ng suspicions that Israel

This decision is a dangerous act that will lead to more instabilit­y

seeks to build the Third Temple on the ruins of al-Aqsa mosque, are all fuelling the Palestinia­n perception of a threat.

This comes despite Netanyahu’s insistence he will keep the status quo.

“The Israeli action against the mosque is the fire which will spread not only in the West Bank but also inside Israel among the Muslims,” says Talal Awkal, a columnist for alAyyam newspaper.

Palestinia­ns believe Israel set a precedent for changing the status quo at al-Aqsa, when, after its victory in the 1967 war, it introduced Jewish prayer inside the Tomb of the Patriarchs holy site in Hebron, which is revered by Muslims as the Ibrahimi mosque and had been an exclusivel­y Muslim area for centuries.

At the home of Hijazi, the suspected assailant, relatives voiced understand­ing for his motives. Police said in a statement that when forces arrived at Hijazi’s house, he opened fire at them and they killed him with return fire.

One resident, an elderly Arab man who declined to be named, described Hijazi as a troublemak­er and said that “he should have been shot 10 years ago”.

Others said he was a good son from a respectabl­e family.

“They are good people, he does nothing wrong,” said one young woman.

Yesterday, crowds of young Palestinia­n men and boys blocked off streets near where Hijazi was killed with rubbish skips and lit fires.

They smashed tiles and bricks and used the pieces to throw at Israeli police.

Police responded with tear gas, scattering the crowd. Clashes continued for hours.

Taghrid Hijazi, Hijazi’s aunt, said she was surprised that he had carried out the attack since he had recently asked her to help him find a wife.

The suspected gunman had served 11 years in an Israeli prison for membership in the radical Islamic Jihad group.

A cousin, who asked not to be named, said: “What he did was a natural response to the threat to al-Aqsa. He died defending (it).”

Another relative said: “For all Muslim men, women and children, al-Aqsa is part of their credo and they will defend it.” – The Independen­t

 ?? PICTURE: EPA ?? Israeli police officers stand guard at the entrance to the Western Wall and the al-Aqsa compound, the third most holiest site in Islam, in Jerusalem’s Old City. Israeli authoritie­s closed the compound for the first time since the second Intifada after...
PICTURE: EPA Israeli police officers stand guard at the entrance to the Western Wall and the al-Aqsa compound, the third most holiest site in Islam, in Jerusalem’s Old City. Israeli authoritie­s closed the compound for the first time since the second Intifada after...
 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? Mourners carry the body of Moataz Hejazi into a Muslim cemetery in East Jerusalem on Thursday.
PICTURE: REUTERS Mourners carry the body of Moataz Hejazi into a Muslim cemetery in East Jerusalem on Thursday.
 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? RAMPAGE: Anti-government protesters loot the parliament in Ouagadougo­u, capital of Burkina Faso.
PICTURE: REUTERS RAMPAGE: Anti-government protesters loot the parliament in Ouagadougo­u, capital of Burkina Faso.

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