Palestinians, Muslims worldwide hold 'Day
of Rage' over Jerusalem
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[December 08, 2017]
By Ali Sawafta
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Thousands of
Palestinians protested in a "day of rage" on Friday in the occupied West
Bank, Gaza and in East Jerusalem against U.S. President Donald Trump's
recognition of the ancient city as Israel's capital.
Across the Arab and Muslim worlds, thousands of demonstrators took to
the streets on Friday, the Muslim holy day, expressing solidarity with
the Palestinians and outrage at the U.S. move.
As Friday prayers ended at the Al Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem, worshippers
made their way toward the walled Old City gates, chanting "Jerusalem is
ours, Jerusalem is our capital," and "We don't need empty words, we need
stones and Kalashnikovs". Some scuffles broke out between protesters and
police.
Trump's decision to reverse decades of U.S. policy and recognize
Jerusalem has been met by days of protests, although violence so far has
largely been contained.
By midday Friday there had been no reports of deaths in two days of
demonstrations in the Palestinian territories. Thirty-one Palestinians
were wounded on Thursday.

Clashes began in some spots of the West Bank after Friday prayers,
though the unrest appeared less intense than the previous day. In Hebron
and Bethlehem dozens of Palestinians threw stones at Israeli soldiers
who fired back with tear gas.
In Gaza, calls for worshippers to protest sounded over mosque
loudspeakers and dozens of youths burnt tires on the main streets of the
enclave, controlled by the Islamist Hamas group, and hundreds rallied
toward the border with Israel.
Hamas has called for a new Palestinian uprising like the "intifadas" of
1987-1993 and 2000-2005 that together saw thousands of Palestinians and
more than 1,000 Israelis killed.
"Whoever moves his embassy to occupied Jerusalem will become an enemy of
the Palestinians and a target of Palestinian factions," said Hamas
leader Fathy Hammad as protesters in Gaza burnt posters of Trump. "We
declare an intifada until the liberation of Jerusalem and all of
Palestine."
ENMITY
Trump's announcement on Wednesday has infuriated the Arab world and
upset Western allies. The status of Jerusalem has been one of the
biggest obstacles to a peace agreement between Israel and the
Palestinians for generations.
Israel considers all of Jerusalem to be its capital. Palestinians want
the eastern part of the city as the capital of a future independent
state of their own. Most countries consider East Jerusalem, which Israel
captured in a 1967 war and annexed, to be occupied territory, including
the Old City, home to sites considered holy to Muslims, Jews and
Christians alike.
For decades, Washington, like most of the rest of the international
community, held back from recognizing Jerusalem as Israel's capital,
arguing that its status should be determined as part of the
Palestinian-Israeli peace process. No other country has its embassy
there.
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Worshippers chant as they wave Palestinian flags after Friday
prayers on the compound known to Muslims as Noble Sanctuary and to
Jews as Temple Mount in Jerusalem's Old City, as Palestinians call
for a "day of rage" in response to U.S. President Donald Trump's
recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital December 8, 2017.
REUTERS/Ammar Awad

The Trump administration argues that the peace process has become
moribund, and outdated policies need to be jettisoned for the sides
in the conflict to make progress.
In Ramallah, the seat of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's
Palestinian Authority, the leader's religious affairs adviser said
Trump's stance was an affront to Islam and Christianity alike.
"America has chosen to elect a President that has put it in enmity
with all Muslims and Christians," said the advisor, Mahmoud
al-Habbash.
Israeli police increased their presence in Jerusalem but set no
extra restrictions on access for worshippers at Al-Aqsa Mosque,
saying they had no indication of unrest there, a sign they
anticipated confrontation to be limited. Police regularly impose age
restrictions at the site, known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary
and to Jews as the Temple Mount, when they anticipate major unrest.
In Iran, which has never recognized Israel and supports anti-Israel
militants, demonstrators burned pictures of Trump and Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu while chanting "Death to the Devil".
Opposition to the U.S. move has united Iran's pragmatist faction,
which supports greater openness to the outside world, behind
hardliners that oppose it.
In Cairo, capital of Egypt, a U.S. ally which has a peace treaty
with Israel, hundreds of protesters who had gathered in Al-Azhar
mosque and outside in its courtyard chanted “Jerusalem is Arab! O
Trump, you madman, the Arab people are everywhere!"

The imam leading Friday prayer at Al-Azhar said the U.S. plan to
move its embassy to Jerusalem was a “terrorist decision" that would
add another settlement to those of Israel.
Thousands also took to the streets in Muslim-majority Malaysia and
Indonesia, where authorities tightened security around U.S.
embassies.
(Additional reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi, Ammar Awad, Omar Fahmy
and Maayan Lubell; Editing by Peter Graff)
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