Israeli police disperse protesters
ISRAELI police forces stormed the most contentious holy site in Jerusalem yesterday to disperse masked Palestinian protesters hurling objects at visiting foreign tourists.
The incident was over quickly, but the area remained tense afterward. In the past, violence at the site - known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary °?°?- has erupted into deadly battles.
Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said police dispersed some 20 masked protesters who had holed up overnight in Al-Aqsa mosque building inside the hilltop compound. The protesters pelted tourists with objects early yesterday, and threw rocks at the police when they responded to the incident, he said.
Calm was quickly restored, he said, and about 1,000 tourists have since visited the area.
However, small groups of masked Palestinians continued to clash with police elsewhere in Jerusalem's Old City and in a nearby neighborhood just outside the walled area.
Rosenfeld said police dispersed the protesters without having to use force, but two officers were lightly wounded and seven Palestinian rioters were arrested. By midday, the clashes had ended, but about 15 Palestinians remained holed up inside the complex.
Tensions have been high in recent days following the Israeli government's announcement that two West Bank shrines would be added to Israel's list of national heritage sites. Palestinians denounced the move as a provocation, and President Mahmoud Abbas has warned the incident could spark a "religious war."
Rosenfeld said it was unclear what sparked the latest violence, but said the decision on the West Bank shrines was clearly in the "background." The protesters, however, said they were under the impression the site was under attack by Jewish extremists. Conflicting claims to the hilltop site of yesterday's violence lie at the heart of the Israel-Palestinian conflict.
Jews revere it as the site of the two biblical Temples, while Muslims regard the Al-Aqsa compound, home to the gold-capped Dome of the Rock, as Islam's third-holiest site, where the Prophet Muhammad ascended to heaven.
The compound has been a frequent flashpoint for conflicts before. A visit to the site in 2000 by Ariel Sharon, then an Israeli opposition leader and later prime minister, ignited clashes that escalated into violence that engulfed Israel and Palestinian territories for several years.
Israel has controlled the compound since capturing east Jerusalem in the 1967 Middle East war and insists it will retain it forever, though it has left day-to-day administration to a Muslim clerical body called the Waqf.
The incident was over quickly, but the area remained tense afterward. In the past, violence at the site - known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary °?°?- has erupted into deadly battles.
Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said police dispersed some 20 masked protesters who had holed up overnight in Al-Aqsa mosque building inside the hilltop compound. The protesters pelted tourists with objects early yesterday, and threw rocks at the police when they responded to the incident, he said.
Calm was quickly restored, he said, and about 1,000 tourists have since visited the area.
However, small groups of masked Palestinians continued to clash with police elsewhere in Jerusalem's Old City and in a nearby neighborhood just outside the walled area.
Rosenfeld said police dispersed the protesters without having to use force, but two officers were lightly wounded and seven Palestinian rioters were arrested. By midday, the clashes had ended, but about 15 Palestinians remained holed up inside the complex.
Tensions have been high in recent days following the Israeli government's announcement that two West Bank shrines would be added to Israel's list of national heritage sites. Palestinians denounced the move as a provocation, and President Mahmoud Abbas has warned the incident could spark a "religious war."
Rosenfeld said it was unclear what sparked the latest violence, but said the decision on the West Bank shrines was clearly in the "background." The protesters, however, said they were under the impression the site was under attack by Jewish extremists. Conflicting claims to the hilltop site of yesterday's violence lie at the heart of the Israel-Palestinian conflict.
Jews revere it as the site of the two biblical Temples, while Muslims regard the Al-Aqsa compound, home to the gold-capped Dome of the Rock, as Islam's third-holiest site, where the Prophet Muhammad ascended to heaven.
The compound has been a frequent flashpoint for conflicts before. A visit to the site in 2000 by Ariel Sharon, then an Israeli opposition leader and later prime minister, ignited clashes that escalated into violence that engulfed Israel and Palestinian territories for several years.
Israel has controlled the compound since capturing east Jerusalem in the 1967 Middle East war and insists it will retain it forever, though it has left day-to-day administration to a Muslim clerical body called the Waqf.
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