More than 150 people were wounded yesterday in clashes between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli police in Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, the first face-off at the flashpoint holy site since the start of Ramadan.
Israeli police said “dozens of masked men” marched into Al-Aqsa setting off fireworks before crowds hurled stones towards the Western Wall.
The Palestinian Red Crescent said 153 people were hospitalised and “dozens” of others were treated at the scene.
Israeli police said at least three officers were hurt. Around 400 people were arrested, the Palestinian Prisoner’s Club said.
The clashes come after three weeks of deadly violence in Israel and the occupied West Bank, and as Jewish and Christian festivals overlap with the holy month of Ramadan.
Al-Aqsa is Islam’s third-holiest site. Last year during the fasting month, clashes that flared in Jerusalem, including between Israeli forces and Palestinians visiting Al-Aqsa, led to 11 days of devastating conflict between Israel and Hamas, the group that rules the Palestinian enclave of Gaza.
Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid said yesterday’s “riots” were “unacceptable”.
UN Middle East peace envoy Tor Wennesland urged “the authorities on both sides to immediately de-escalate the situation and prevent any further provocations by radical actors”, a position echoed by the US Palestinian Affairs Unit and the EU’s diplomatic service.
Police said crowds had hurled rocks “in the direction of the Western Wall...and as the violence surged, police were forced to enter the grounds surrounding the mosque,” adding officers “did not enter the mosque.”
But Al-Aqsa Mosque director Omar al-Kiswani said that an “assault was made inside the Al-Aqsa Mosque”.
“More than 80 young people inside the holy mosque were displaced,” he said, adding: “Al-Aqsa Mosque is a red line”. Before Ramadan, Israel and Jordan stepped up talks in an effort to avoid a repeat of last year’s violence. Jordan serves as custodian of the mosque compound, while Israel controls access. Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh said there was “no place for the invaders and occupiers in our holy Jerusalem”.
“Hamas does not want a new confrontation,” said Mukhaimer Abu Saada, professor of political science at Gaza’s Al-Azhar University. An Israeli security source said the Islamic Jihad group — which controls neither the West Bank nor Gaza — would be more inclined towards an escalation with Israel. The group warned “the confrontation will be closer and harder” for Israeli forces if “they do not stop the aggression against our people”. Along with Hamas, Islamic Jihad mobilised thousands of people in Gaza yesterday in solidarity with Palestinians at Al-Aqsa, AFP correspondents reported.
Israel has poured additional forces into the West Bank and is reinforcing its wall and fence barrier after four deadly attacks in the Jewish state in the past three weeks.



Supporters of the Palestinian Hamas and Islamic Jihad movements rally after Friday prayers in Gaza City yesterday, following clashes at Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque compound.

Related Story