Violence Erupts As Palestinians And Israel Forces Clash In Jerusalem, West Bank

A Palestinian uses a sling shot to throw stones during clashes with Israeli troops at Qalandia checkpoint between Jerusalem and the West Bank city of Ramallah (AP photo
A Palestinian uses a sling shot to throw stones dur­ing clash­es with Israeli troops at Qalandia check­point between Jerusalem and the West Bank city of Ramallah (AP photo

Violence between Palestinian pro­test­ers and Israeli secu­ri­ty forces spread beyond the walls of Jerusalem’s old city on Friday, with at least eight Palestinians shot in clash­es in the West Bank and Israeli police­men injured by fire­bombs in a restive part of the city. In a rare deci­sion, Israeli lead­ers called up a few hun­dred bor­der police reservists to beef up secu­ri­ty as ten­sions rise over Jerusalem’s most sen­si­tive holy site. One Israeli civil­ian has been killed in the vio­lence since Sunday. In the West Bank, vio­lent protests broke out after Muslim prayers Friday after­noon. The Palestinian Red Crescent said 8 Palestinians were seri­ous­ly hurt after being shot by live rounds. About 20 were light­ly hurt in clash­es with Israeli sol­diers, it said. Two Palestinians were shot and wound­ed while throw­ing fire­bombs at Rachel’s Tomb in Bethlehem, police said.

Palestinians also clashed with Israeli forces in Hebron, Qalandia and else­where. The police­men were attacked on Friday near the area in Jerusalem where an Israeli man died ear­li­er in the week after Palestinians pelt­ed his car with rocks. Palestinians threw fire­bombs and rocks at the offi­cers, and three of them were tak­en to a hos­pi­tal, author­i­ties said. Emergency ser­vices said one offi­cer was shot in the arm. Most of the unrest had until now focused on Jerusalem’s most sen­si­tive holy site — a hill­top com­pound sacred to both Jews and Muslims. The com­pound is a fre­quent flash­point and its fate is a core issue at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

It is known to Jews as the Temple Mount, site of the two bib­li­cal Jewish tem­ples and the religion’s holi­est site. Muslims revere it as the Noble Sanctuary and it is Islam’s third holi­est spot, where they believe Prophet Muhammad ascend­ed on a vis­it to heav­en. Since Israel cap­tured east Jerusalem from Jordan in 1967, Jews have been allowed to vis­it but not pray at the com­pound. Under an arrange­ment, Muslim author­i­ties man­age the site’s reli­gious and civil­ian affairs under Jordanian super­vi­sion, while Israeli police over­see secu­ri­ty. Palestinians say in the last two months there has been a new devel­op­ment where Israel has inter­mit­tent­ly restrict­ed some Muslims from the com­pound when Jews vis­it. Israel says this is to reduce fric­tion, but Palestinians claim that Israel intends to estab­lish Muslim-free Jewish vis­it­ing hours, which they fear could lead to upsets in the frag­ile arrange­ment in place.

Israel has reit­er­at­ed its posi­tion that it has no plans to change the sta­tus quo at the site. But even rumors to the con­trary are enough to spark vio­lence. The unrest began Sunday on the eve of the Jewish new year hol­i­day of Rosh Hashanah when Palestinians bar­ri­cad­ed them­selves inside the Al-Aqsa Mosque and threw rocks and fire­crack­ers at offi­cers. Police said pipe bombs were also found there.

Palestinians run as Israeli troops use a water canon to disperse protesters during clashes in Jalazoun refugee camp, near the West Bank city of Ramallah (AP photo)
Palestinians run as Israeli troops use a water canon to dis­perse pro­test­ers dur­ing clash­es in Jalazoun refugee camp, near the West Bank city of Ramallah (AP photo)

Rumors had been spread­ing among Palestinians of a “plot” to take over the site after activists from a Jewish group pub­li­cized a notice for “a mass vis­it to the Temple Mount” on Sunday. Police entered the hill­top com­pound three days in a row to dis­perse Palestinians who had holed up inside the mosque with stock­piles of rocks and fire­works. The Israeli response sparked con­dem­na­tions across the Arab world and con­cern that the ten­sions could spi­ral out of control.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas con­demned the clash­es in par­tic­u­lar­ly harsh lan­guage, claim­ing that none of Jerusalem’s holy sites belonged to Israel. Israel’s pub­lic secu­ri­ty min­is­ter Gilad Erdan on Friday blamed Abbas for “incite­ment and lies” that led to vio­lence. He said that by bring­ing explo­sive mate­ri­als and rocks into the holy site, pro­test­ers had turned the “house of wor­ship” into a “ware­house of terror.”

Earlier, parliament’s for­eign affairs and defense com­mit­tee decid­ed in a “spe­cial dis­cus­sion” Friday to call up bor­der police reserves to beef up secu­ri­ty. Police have put thou­sands of offi­cers on patrol. Authorities also banned Muslim men under the age of 40 from pray­ing at the site in an attempt to curb vio­lence as most­ly younger Palestinians throw rocks at the site. Saudi Arabia’s King Salman has tele­phoned world lead­ers includ­ing U.S. President Barack Obama, British Prime Minister David Cameron, Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, urg­ing them to take mea­sures at the U.N. Security Council to stem the unrest, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

He told the lead­ers in his calls Thursday that “such aggres­sion fla­grant­ly vio­lates the holi­ness of reli­gions and gives a hand to fan extrem­ism and vio­lence in the entire world,” the report said. He also spoke with Abbas con­cern­ing the devel­op­ments. Elsewhere in Israel, a rock­et fired from Gaza explod­ed in the bor­der town of Sderot on Friday evening, the mil­i­tary said. The town has been hard-hit by rock­ets from neigh­bor­ing Gaza, ruled by the Islamic mil­i­tant group Hamas, over the years. Israeli media said the rock­et Friday dam­aged a house and a bus. Nobody was hurt.
Violence erupts as Palestinians and Israel forces clash in Jerusalem, West Bank