Bangkok Post

Six killed over shrine in Israel

PALESTINIA­NS GALVANISED OVER PERCEIVED THREAT TO HOLY SITE

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>> JERUSALEM: Three Palestinia­ns were killed in street clashes in Jerusalem and three Israelis died in a stabbing attack at a West Bank settlement as tensions turned into violence over the Holy Land’s most contested shrine.

A Palestinia­n sneaked into a home in the Israeli settlement of Halamish in the West Bank after nightfall on Friday and stabbed to death three Israelis, the military said.

The attacker apparently jumped over the fence and infiltrate­d the family’s home, surprising them as they ate the traditiona­l Sabbath evening meal. It said the Palestinia­n killed a man and two of his children, while a woman was wounded and taken to a hospital. The man’s grandchild­ren were present but not harmed, it said.

The army released footage showing a blood-covered kitchen floor. It said senior military officials were meeting overnight to discuss how to proceed.

A military spokesman called the Palestinia­n attack “a massacre”.

Israel TV’s Channel 10 said the assailant was in his late teens and had posted on Facebook that he was upset by the events at the Jerusalem shrine. Eli Bin, the head of Israel’s rescue service MDA, said an off-duty soldier next door heard screams, rushed to the home and shot the attacker through a window. Mr Bin said the wounded attacker was taken to a hospital.

Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas, meanwhile, announced that he is freezing ties with Israel, dealing a blow to fledgling Trump administra­tion efforts to try to renew long-dormant peace talks.

Mr Abbas said contacts with Israel would be suspended on “all levels”. It was not immediatel­y clear if this means long-standing security coordinati­on between Israeli troops and Abbas’ forces will be halted.

At issue in the current round of violence are metal detectors Israel installed at the Jerusalem shrine this week in response to an attack by Arab gunmen there.

The metal detectors are perceived by the Palestinia­ns as an encroachme­nt on Muslim rights and portrayed by Israel as a needed security measure following the attack that killed two Israeli policemen.

Earlier on Friday, several thousand Palestinia­ns in Jerusalem and the West Bank clashed with Israeli troops, burning tyres or throwing stones and firecracke­rs. Troops fired live rounds, rubber bullets and tear gas. Three Palestinia­ns were killed and several dozen hospitalis­ed with live or rubber bullet injuries.

White clouds of tear gas rose from Jerusalem streets and West Bank flashpoint­s. In one neighbourh­ood, Palestinia­ns threw stones from behind a mattress used as a shield.

Israel also faced growing criticism from the Muslim world, and thousands staged anti-Israel protests after Friday prayers in Jordan and Yemen. Turkey and Egypt also condemned the violence.

The confrontat­ions could escalate in coming days as both sides dig in.

Israel said the metal detectors would remain in place. Lawmaker Tzachi Hanegbi, a confidante of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said Israel would not surrender to what he said was “violence and incitement’’ by those “attempting to drag us into a religious war”.

Jerusalem’s top Muslim cleric, Mohammed Hussein, said protests, including mass street prayers outside the shrine, would continue until the devices are removed. He told worshipper­s on Friday that they should prepare for a “long test of wills’’ with Israel. “We will not back off,” he said.

The shrine, revered by Muslims and Jews, sits at the emotional epicentre of the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, symbolisin­g the rival religious and national narratives of the two sides.

Disputes over the 15-hectare walled hilltop platform in Jerusalem’s Old City have repeatedly triggered major confrontat­ions in the past.

Muslim leaders have portrayed the metal detectors as part of a purported Israeli campaign to expand its control over the shrine — a claim Israel denies. Muslim clerics urged worshipper­s to pray in the streets near the shrine, rather than submit to the new security procedures.

The faithful complied. Thousands flocked to the Old City each day this week for street prayers, kneeling on mats spread on cobbleston­e and asphalt.

On Friday, the highlight of the Muslim religious week, Israeli police severely restricted Muslim access to the Old City to prevent mass protests.

Some 3,000 officers were deployed at checkpoint­s in and around the city, turning away Muslim men under the age of 50, including those trying to reach the city from Israel and the West Bank.

In the end, only a fraction of the typical Friday turnout of tens of thousands of worshipper­s reached the Old City. After peaceful prayers, clashes erupted in several areas of Jerusalem and across the West Bank.

Palestinia­n health officials said three Palestinia­ns were killed by live fire in different areas of Jerusalem.

The Red Crescent said 390 Palestinia­ns were hurt, including close to 100 who were hospitalis­ed for live fire or rubber bullet injuries. Israeli police said five officers were wounded.

The perceived threat to the shrine, home to the al-Aqsa and Dome of the Rock mosques, has galvanised Palestinia­ns — especially those in east Jerusalem which was captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war and quickly annexed.

Since 1967, Israel has increasing­ly cut off east Jerusalem from its West Bank hinterland, leaving the city’s Arab residents without political leadership.

Muslim clerics stepped into the void this week, taking the lead in prayer protests.

Under the post-1967 arrangemen­ts, Muslims administer the compound. Jews can visit, but not pray there. For decades, the status quo held, in part because leading rabbis, citing religious purity laws, banned Jews from entering.

 ??  ?? FRESH FIGHTING: A Palestinia­n protester hurls stones towards Israeli troops near the border between Israel and the central Gaza Strip on Friday.
FRESH FIGHTING: A Palestinia­n protester hurls stones towards Israeli troops near the border between Israel and the central Gaza Strip on Friday.

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