Israeli police clashed with Palestinian protesters in Jerusalem's
Old City, the occupied West Bank and Gaza on Friday, reflecting growing
tensions over an increase in Jewish visits to the al-Aqsa mosque
compound.
Palestinian militants and youth groups have called for a general
uprising in response to the entry by Jewish groups under police escort
to the Jerusalem holy site, which is revered by both Muslims and Jews.
Police threw stun grenades to disperse small crowds of youths
outside Jerusalem's medieval walls, and dozens of protesters marched on a
crossing between Israel and the Gaza Strip before being driven back by
volleys of tear gas.
Protests also flared in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, at an
Israeli-manned checkpoint outside the northern city of Nablus and in the
flashpoint holy city of Hebron, where a Palestinian sniper shot dead an
Israeli soldier on Sunday.
Witnesses reported several injuries in the clashes and police said
they had arrested 12 Palestinians in Jerusalem for throwing stones at
security forces.
Palestinian protests over a visit to the al-Aqsa mosque compound by
then Israeli opposition leader Ariel Sharon in September 2000 spiraled
into deadly clashes and a five-year Palestinian uprising, known as the
second Intifada.
Palestinians oppose Jewish worship at the plaza, which overlooks
Judaism's Western Wall, seeing it as a first step toward restricting
access to the area for Muslims and a deepening of Israeli control over
the Old City.
Israeli and Palestinian negotiators resumed U.S.-brokered peace talks in late July, ending a three-year stalemate.
But friction on the ground has risen during September's Jewish
festivals, with Palestinian leaders complaining about swelling numbers
of Jewish visitors, saying some of them try to defy an effective ban on
praying on the vast esplanade.
THIRD INTIFADA?
"The uprising (in 2000) erupted when al-Aqsa mosque was stormed.
They (the Israelis) are now raiding al-Aqsa every day," a senior
official with the Islamist Hamas group, Mushir Al-Masri, told thousands
of supporters at a Gaza rally.
Activists burnt effigies of Israeli leaders and set fire to three coffins, one bearing the words "Death to Israel".
"We call upon our people to revolt against tyranny and aggression.
Let a third Intifada be declared because this is the best way to teach
the aggressors a lesson," said Masri, adding that "every Jew" would be
extracted from Jerusalem.
Despite his calls for a revolt, the protests within Hamas-controlled
Gaza were low-key. There was also little sign of major confrontation
looming in the West Bank, where Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
exercises partial rule.
In a speech at the United Nations on Thursday, Abbas made a public appeal for a halt to the al-Aqsa visits.
"There must be an end to the near-daily attacks on the religious
sites in Occupied Jerusalem, at the forefront of which is al-Aqsa
mosque, where the continuation of such attacks will have dire
consequences," he said.
Allies of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have been among
the most vocal advocates of Jewish prayer at the 35-acre site and the
government has done little to stem the flow of visitors to the area.
Religious Jews revere the compound as the location of their ancient
biblical temples. For Muslims, it is the place where Prophet Mohammed is
believed to have ascended into heaven - the third holiest site in
Islam.
Israel captured the site, along with the rest of East Jerusalem, the
West Bank and Gaza Strip, in the 1967 Middle East war. The Jewish state
then annexed East Jerusalem as part of its capital in a move never
recognized internationally.
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