East Jerusalem: Clashes in Al-Aqsa, Hamas denounces an “unprecedented crime”

East Jerusalem

Clashes in Al-Aqsa, Hamas denounces an “unprecedented crime”

The Israeli police announced during the night that they had intervened in the al-Aqsa mosque to dislodge “agitators” who had introduced “fireworks, sticks and stones” there.

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An Israeli patrol near al-Aqsa on April 5, 2023.

AFP

Violent clashes pitted Israeli police Wednesday night once morest what they described as “rioters” in the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem, one of the most iconic Muslim places of worship in the world.

Denouncing “an unprecedented crime”, the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas, in power in the Gaza Strip, called on Palestinians in the West Bank “to go en masse to the al-Aqsa mosque to defend it”.

It is located on the esplanade of the Mosques, the third holiest site in Islam, in East Jerusalem, the Palestinian sector of the Holy City occupied and annexed by Israel. The Esplanade is built on what the Jews call the Temple Mount, the holiest place in Judaism.

Rising tensions

This violence occurs shortly before the middle of Ramadan and as the Jews prepare to celebrate Easter from Wednesday evening, and in a climate of rising tensions between Israelis and Palestinians since the beginning of the year.

Israeli police have released video footage of more than 50 seconds showing explosions of what appear to be fireworks inside the place of worship, including figures throwing rocks. Another police video footage shows riot police advancing through the mosque shielding themselves from rocket fire with shields. Footage then shows a barricaded door, batteries of fireworks on a carpet on the floor, and police evacuating at least five people with their hands cuffed behind their backs.

“Young Outlaws”

“Tonight, as the police worked to allow large numbers of Muslims to celebrate the month of Ramadan and arrive in the Old City of Jerusalem and on the Temple Mount, several young masked outlaws and agitators brought inside the mosque [al-Aqsa] fireworks, sticks and stones,” Israeli police wrote in a statement. “These ringleaders barricaded themselves there several hours later. [les dernières prières du soir] in order to attack public order and desecrate the mosque”, while chanting “slogans inciting hatred and violence”, adds the text.

“After many and long unsuccessful attempts to get them out through dialogue, the police forces were forced [d’intervenir] to dislodge them in order to allow the holding [des premières prières de l’aube] and prevent violent disturbances,” the police continued.

During the intervention, “a large group of agitators” fired fireworks and threw stones inside the mosque towards the police, writes the police, indicating that an officer was injured by a stone in the leg. The security forces “arrested the rioters”, who “caused damage to the mosque and desecrated it”, adds the text without specifying the number of people detained.

After the announcement of the clashes at the Al-Aqsa mosque, several rockets were fired from the northern Gaza Strip towards Israeli territory, according to AFP journalists and witnesses. AFP journalists saw three rockets fire from afar, and witnesses said they saw others. The Israeli army reported the triggering of warning sirens in several Israeli urban areas around the Gaza Strip.

“Dangerous Climb”

The Israeli army indicated for its part that five rockets fired in the direction of Israeli territory had been “intercepted by anti-aircraft defenses” in the area of ​​Sderot (southern Israel), and that four other rockets had fallen in uninhabited areas. . None of these shootings were claimed.

In Gaza, a few dozen demonstrators took to the streets in several places overnight, burning tires. “We swear to defend and protect the Al-Aqsa Mosque,” they proclaimed.

The Egyptian Foreign Ministry issued a statement “condemning the Israeli police’s irruption inside [de la mosquée] Al-Aqsa and the aggression once morest the faithful”. “Egypt holds Israel, the occupying power, responsible for this dangerous escalation which might undermine the truce efforts”, adds the text.

The Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been sucked into a spiral of violence since the beginning of the year following one of the most right-wing governments in Israel’s history took office at the end of December. The violence has claimed nearly 110 lives since the start of the year and resumed over the weekend following a semblance of a lull observed since the start of Ramadan on March 23.

(AFP)

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