Clashes Erupt in Occupied East Jerusalem in Protest
Against Building Synagogue Beside Al-Aqsa Mosque
Clashes erupt in East Jerusalem
Published today (updated) 16/03/2010 14:07
Jerusalem - Ma'an -
Clashes erupted between Palestinian protesters and Israeli occupation
forces and police forces across the occupied Palestinian territories on
Tuesday morning, following a day of tensions over access to Al-Aqsa
Mosque and building a synagogue beside Al-Aqsa Mosque.
Dozens of
Palestinians were injured and many were detained in the ongoing
confrontations. Two Israeli officers were also reported injured.
The violence was centered in occupied East Jerusalem and its
environs, namely the Shufat refugee camp, Eisaweyah, Ras Al-Amoud, and
Wadi Al-Jouz area of Silwan, as well as the Old City.
Hundreds
of young Palestinians attacked a checkpoint at the entrance of the
Shu'afat camp, north of Jerusalem, throwing stones at Israeli occupation
forces stationed nearby, Ma'an's Jerusalem correspondent reported. He
said special police forces were called to the scene and fired tear-gas
canisters, stun grenades and rubber-coated bullets at the demonstrators.
Two young Palestinians were detained, he added.
Israeli
occupation forces tightened a blockade on the Old City, particularly the
Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, continuing a week-long trend. Police were seen
preventing women from entering the mosque.
Police were also seen
chasing protesters in Wadi Al-Joz while a helicopter hovered above.
Young Palestinians lit fireworks in the Old City as Israeli forces moved
in. Three were detained there, among them Iyad At-Tawil, 12, as well as
his mother and aunt.
In Qalandiya refugee camp, north of the
city, hundreds of students clashed with Israeli forces who fired
rubber-coated bullets and stun grenades to disperse the demonstrators. A
15-year-old student was detained there, onlookers said. Clashes also
erupted at the Qalandiya checkpoint, an Israeli security official said.
Palestinian citizens of Israel were prevented from visiting
Jerusalem. Israeli forces stopped a bus arriving from Majd Al-Kroom,
alleging that the passengers were en route to the demonstrations. They
detained a 39-year-old man accused of striking a police officer.
Israeli occupation forces were filmed preventing journalists from
covering the events in Eisaweyah, telling a live Al-Jazeera broadcast
that the measures were for the reporters' own protection.
Meanwhile, rallies were held across the Gaza Strip in solidarity with
Jerusalem.
Atara checkpoint violence injures soldier, 10 Palestinians
Published yesterday (updated) 16/03/2010 09:18
Bethlehem - Ma'an -
Several Palestinians were injured, along with an Israeli soldier
after witnesses reported hearing heavy gunfire at the Atara checkpoint,
near Ramallah, following its closure on Monday.
Later reports
confirmed that dozens of Birzeit University Students students
participated in a march against the Israeli attacks on the Al-Aqsa
Mosque, and threw stones at soldiers.
An Israeli military
spokesman said Israeli forces were responding with "riot dispersal
mechanisms" against Palestinians in the area. He said there were "70
rioters," though witnesses several meters away from the scene reported
no protests, demonstrations or riots.
Ten students were injured
including three with live bullets, medics at the Ramallah Government
Hospital said. One young man was hit in the jaw, and doctors said his
condition was stable, while other injuries were described as light to
moderate.
The governor of Ramallah Laila Ghanam visited the
three injured students at the hospital and promised to cover the costs
of treatment.
An Israeli spokesman said there was no live fire,
though rubber coated metal bullets are considered part of the Israeli
"dispersal" arsenal.
The military spokesman said one soldier was
evacuated to hospital in Israel and four Palestinians were evacuated by
the Palestine Red Crescent.
The Atara checkpoint was closed
during the protest, causing long waits for travelers passing from the
central to the northern West Bank.
Qrei'a fears Intifada if Israeli policy persists
Published yesterday (updated) 16/03/2010 11:56
Jerusalem – Ma'an –
PLO Executive Committee member Ahmad Qrei'a said Monday that if
Israeli occupation government practices in East Jerusalem continues , a
third uprising would ensue.
"If matters remain at this level,
regardless of whether we take the decision or not, it [an intifada] is
coming. If Israel continues these practices, it is coming," he told
reporters during a news conference in his Abu Diss office in East
Jerusalem.
An intifada, or uprising, he said, "is not a matter
of official decision, but rather it arises from the culmination of
oppression, injustice, aggression and tyranny. It is something the
people decide. This is what happened with the two previous intifadas."
Qrei'a, who also heads the Jerusalem affairs department in the
PLO, said successive Israeli governments have attempted to change the
city's demographic nature, threatening Arab Muslim and Christian
identity. Israeli policy is aimed at severing Jerusalem from
negotiations and fully annexing the city to Israel, he added.
A
synagogue's rededication ceremony on Tuesday, 300 meters away from the
Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, is a "dangerous program" intent on "Judaizing"
Jerusalem and falsify history, he said.
Moreover, Qrei'a spoke
of unprecedented aggression and provocation faced by Palestinians,
citing a recent leaflet distributed by right-wing Jewish groups calling
on non-Jews to leave Jerusalem, as well as rumors of an Israeli take
over of the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound on Tuesday.
"Jerusalem is
exposed to an unprecedented danger which targets its land, people, holy
sites, heritage and history," Qrei'a said, adding that determining the
fate of the city is paramount, without which a comprehensive solution
cannot be attained.
Revealing a 1882 map of Jerusalem showing
intended Israeli settlements, the PLO official said it proved the
considerable risk faced by Palestinians in the city.
State Department: Mitchell may postpone visit
Published today (updated) 16/03/2010 11:38
Bethlehem - Ma'an -
The US State Department is waiting for a formal Israeli response to
its concerns, declining comment on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's
remarks in support of settlements, Agence France-Presse reported Monday.
Netanyahu earlier in the day indicated that construction of
Israeli settlements would continue in East Jerusalem, despite an angry
phone call last week from US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urging
him to stop, AFP said.
"When she outlined what she thought
appropriate actions would be to the prime minister, she asked for a
response by the Israeli government. We wait for the response," State
Department spokesman reportedly Philip Crowley told reporters.
Crowley added: "We asked for a formal response from the Israeli
government and when we get that response we'll react to it."
He
also said US envoy George Mitchell may reschedule travel plans to the
region, where he was expected to arrive this week.
"This is a
fluid situation. As of this moment he's still in the United States,"
Crowley said, according to AFP.