Violence rocks Holy City again
INJURIES: PALESTINIANS, ISRAELI SOLDIERS CLASH Arab nations with diplomatic ties to Jewish state condemn clashes.
Hundreds of people were wounded in new clashes yesterday between Palestinians and Israeli security forces in Jerusalem as a planned march marking Israel’s 1967 takeover of the Holy City threatened to further inflame tensions.
Palestinians hurled projectiles at Israeli officers in riot gear who fired rubber bullets, stun grenades and teargas, an AFP correspondent at the scene said, following a night of sporadic clashes.
“There are hundreds of people injured from the clashes” and about 50 were hospitalised, the Palestinian Red Crescent said about the latest unrest since violence escalated following Friday’s prayers after the holy Muslim month of Ramadan ended.
The clashes were the latest in days of the worst such disturbances in Jerusalem since 2017, fuelled by a years-long bid by Jewish settlers to take over nearby Palestinian homes in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem.
A key court hearing scheduled for yesterday on Sheikh Jarrah, the flashpoint east Jerusalem neighbourhood at the centre of the property dispute, has been postponed.
There were fears of further violence in the city ahead of a planned march by Israelis to commemorate Israel’s takeover of Jerusalem in the 1967 Six-Day War, an anniversary known as “Jerusalem Day” in the Jewish state.
Israeli police had, as of Sunday, approved the march.
The leader of the far-right Religious Zionism party, Bezalel Smotrich, had also announced a visit yesterday to the tense Sheikh Jarrah district.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday defended Israel’s response to the protests and rioting. “We will uphold law and order – vigorously and responsibly,” he said while vowing to “guard freedom of worship for all faiths”.
But the Israeli role in the hostilities – especially Friday’s clashes at the Al-Aqsa mosque compound, Islam’s third-holiest site – has met widespread criticism.
All six Arab nations that have diplomatic ties with Israel – Egypt, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan – have condemned the Jewish state.
In Jordan, the custodian of Jerusalem’s holy Islamic and Christian sites, King Abdullah II condemned “Israeli violations and escalatory practices at the blessed Al-Aqsa mosque”.
Jordan and Egypt both summoned Israeli envoys on Sunday to lodge protests. Tunisia said the UN Security Council was to hold a closed-door meeting yesterday, at its request, on the violence.
The Middle East quartet of envoys from the European Union, Russia, the United States and the United Nations – and Pope Francis – have all called for calm. –