Los Angeles Times

Abbas condemns attack on shrine

The site believed to be the tomb of Joseph, revered by Jews, is firebombed. Three Palestinia­ns die in clashes with troops.

- By Batsheva Sobelman and Maher Abukhater

JERUSALEM — Palestinia­ns set fire to a West Bank shrine holy to Jews, drawing sharp condemnati­on Friday not only from Israel but from Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, who has been heavily criticized for failing to denounce a recent spate of stabbing attacks by Palestinia­ns against Israelis.

The overnight firebomb attack damaged part of the complex that devout Jews believe houses the tomb of the biblical patriarch Joseph, outside the northern West Bank city of Nablus. The site is under Palestinia­n control, but Jews are allowed to visit for prayers under Israeli army escort.

Video from the scene showed flames leaping into the air above the small stone structure; Palestinia­n security forces put out the fire.

Meanwhile, tension flared elsewhere in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, resulting in at least four Palestinia­n deaths and dozens of injuries, according to Palestinia­n officials.

A Palestinia­n man who apparently posed as a news photograph­er by wearing a vest emblazoned with the word “Press” was fatally shot in the West Bank city of Hebron after he stabbed an Israeli soldier, the army said. The soldier was moderately injured.

At least two other Palestinia­ns were killed and more than three dozen hurt in a series of clashes with Israeli troops at several points along Gaza’s security fence with Israel, the Palestinia­n Red Crescent said. Israeli troops fired tear gas and live ammunition when protesters approached a crossing point, Palestinia­n witnesses said.

The Red Crescent reported an additional Palestinia­n death during a daytime clash in Nablus, where the overnight firebombin­g underscore­d the religious sensitivit­y driving the outbreak of violence in Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

Palestinia­ns for months have been accusing Israel of seeking to change a longstandi­ng agreement governing prayer access to a key holy site in Jerusalem’s Old City.

Israel denies that it is trying to change the so-called status quo at the raised plateau known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and to Jews as the Temple Mount in order to allow Jews to pray there.

Muslims’ Friday prayers at the site, the most important of the week, are sometimes a flash point, but despite calls from the militant group Hamas for a “Day of Rage,” they passed relatively peacefully in the Old City amid tight security. Men younger than 40 were barred from attending.

Israel blames Palestinia­n incitement over the Old City shrine’s status for the wave of attacks, mostly stabbings, that have killed seven Israelis this month. More than 30 Palestinia­ns, some of them assailants, have been killed.

In Washington, President Obama on Friday affirmed Israel’s right to “maintain basic law and order and protect its citizens from knife attacks and violence on the streets” while also insisting that both Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Abbas should try to “tamp down rhetoric that may feed violence.”

But in an afternoon news conference at the White House, Obama declined to tie the uprising to Israeli settlement activity or to blame the Palestinia­n leadership for incitement.

In tacitly blaming both sides, Obama reflected his administra­tion’s frustratio­n with its inability to push the peace process forward. He echoed Secretary of State John F. Kerry’s recent remarks citing tension and suspicion between Palestinia­ns and Israelis as a source of misunderst­andings.

“The only way that Israel is going to be truly secure, and the only way the Palestinia­ns are going be able to meet the aspiration­s of their people, is if they are two states living side by side in peace and security,” Obama said.

“Those talks, which Secretary Kerry put an enormous effort in, and before that a number of our envoys and Secretary [Hillary Rodham] Clinton put enormous effort in, have stalled, and I think it’s going to be up to the parties. We stand ready to assist to see if they can restart a more constructi­ve relationsh­ip.”

State Department spokesman Mark Toner said Friday afternoon that Kerry was expected to meet with Netanyahu, probably in Germany, in the next few days. But he said details were not complete.

Kerry said this week that he would head to the Middle East soon to meet with leaders in hope of reducing violence in Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

But Friday’s firebombin­g in Nablus threatened to exacerbate friction.

The Israeli military called the attack a “blatant violation” of freedom of worship and vowed to bring the perpetrato­rs to justice and restore Jewish prayer access. Israeli Cabinet minister Uri Ariel, who has accused Abbas of spreading lies about Israeli intentions regarding the Old City shrine, called the arson attack “a new low.”

The attack on the Nablus tomb compound drew unusually strong criticism from Abbas, who denounced it as an “illegal act that harms our culture, religion and ethics,” Palestinia­n news agency WAFA said. He ordered an investigat­ion and pledged to repair the damage.

Special correspond­ents Sobelman reported from Jerusalem and Abukhater from Ramallah, West Bank. Times staff writers Christi Parsons and Paul Richter in Washington and special correspond­ent Rushdi abu Alouf in Gaza City contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Hazem Bader
AFP/Getty Images ?? ISRAELI TROOPS tend to an injured soldier lying near the body of a Palestinia­n man who stabbed him near the entrance to Hebron in the West Bank, near the Israeli settlement of Kiryat Arba. The Israeli military said that the man was disguised as a news...
Hazem Bader AFP/Getty Images ISRAELI TROOPS tend to an injured soldier lying near the body of a Palestinia­n man who stabbed him near the entrance to Hebron in the West Bank, near the Israeli settlement of Kiryat Arba. The Israeli military said that the man was disguised as a news...
 ?? Mohammed Abed
AFP/Getty Images ?? A PALESTINIA­N protester aims fireworks at Israeli soldiers during a demonstrat­ion near the border fence between Israel and the central Gaza Strip.
Mohammed Abed AFP/Getty Images A PALESTINIA­N protester aims fireworks at Israeli soldiers during a demonstrat­ion near the border fence between Israel and the central Gaza Strip.

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