What's the issue with metal detectors in
Jerusalem?
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[July 24, 2017]
By Miriam Berger
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - For 10 days,
Jerusalem has been in the grip of the worst bloodshed for years over
Israel's decision to install metal detectors at the entrance to the Old
City's holy compound.
Some readers and observers have wondered how a simple matter of metal
detectors - so common in so much of the world - could provoke such
violence: a Palestinian man stabbed to death three members of an Israeli
family in their home and three Palestinians have been shot dead by
Israeli forces in clashes.
But as with anything connected to politics and religion in the Holy
Land, the dispute is about much more than the security devices
themselves, touching on issues of sovereignty, religious freedom,
occupation and Palestinian nationalism.
Here are some answers to questions on the issue.
WHY, WHERE AND WHEN WERE THE METAL DETECTORS INSTALLED?
Israel put the devices in place on July 16, two days after two Israeli
policemen were shot and killed by Israeli-Arab attackers who had
concealed weapons in the compound in the heart of the Old City. It is
known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary, where the Aqsa Mosque and the
Dome of the Rock are located, and to Jews as Temple Mount, the holiest
place in Judaism, where ancient temples once stood.
The detectors were put up at the entrances Muslims use to enter the
compound each day for prayers. Non-Muslims are allowed to visit the area
as tourists and they enter through a separate gate where metal detectors
have long been used.
WHY ARE PALESTINIANS SO ANGRY ABOUT THE MOVE?
The first issue is consultation. The Palestinians say they were not
informed by the Israelis about the detectors. Israel says it informed
Jordan, the custodian of the holy site. Either way, the measures were
imposed rapidly and had an immediate impact on Palestinians, even though
Israeli-Arabs carried out the attack that prompted the installation.
Israel captured East Jerusalem, including the Old City, in the 1967
Middle East war and annexed them, a move not recognized internationally.
As a result, it is to this day seen by much of the world as an occupier,
and the status of the area is regarded as disputed until resolved via
negotiations. Hence the Palestinians reject Israel's authority, its
heavy security presence and the unilateral move on metal detectors.
But the dispute goes deeper. For centuries, a delicate status quo has
existed at the Noble Santuary-Temple Mount whereby Jews and Christians
can visit, but only Muslims are allowed to pray. When Israel captured
the area, it committed itself to that agreement. Yet many Palestinians
are upset that more and more religious-nationalist Jews visit the
compound each day, with some attempting to pray. They are usually
ejected by Israeli police, but Palestinians feel the status quo is
changing. The installation of metal detectors has contributed to the
impression that Israel is changing the rules, a view rejected by the
Israeli government.
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Palestinians stand in front of Israeli policemen and newly
installed metal detectors at an entrance to the compound known to
Muslims as Noble Sanctuary and to Jews as Temple Mount, in
Jerusalem's Old City July 16, 2017. REUTERS/Ammar Awad/File Photo
WHAT ARE THE POLITICIANS DOING?
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is under pressure internationally
to back down and remove the metal detectors, but he has resisted
those calls, saying security is paramount. He is meeting senior
cabinet members to examine a way forward, with signs that
alternatives, such as face-recognition cameras or selective
searches, might be proposed. The problem is any Israeli-led
initiative is likely to be rejected by the Palestinians and possibly
Jordan. So the United Nations, the United States, Europe and Russia
may get involved. U.S. President Donald Trump's regional go-between,
Jason Greenblatt, is scheduled to return to the region on Monday.
On the Palestinian side, tempers are frayed. "Sovereignty over the
blessed mosque is for us," Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said
in a speech last week. "We are the ones who should be monitoring and
standing at its gates."
Abbas has broken off security coordination with Israel, a
significant move since Palestinian and Israeli forces work together
daily on security in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, where
Palestinians have limited self-rule.
WHAT ARE THE PEOPLE SAYING?
Israelis are wondering what all the fuss is about, commenting on
Facebook and Twitter about how metal detectors are normal everywhere
in the world and pointing out that Jews have to pass through them to
get to the Western Wall, the holiest place where they are permitted
to pray.
Palestinians see it very differently. The Noble Sanctuary has become
a symbol of national aspiration, with the Dome of the Rock and
Al-Aqsa mosque painted on murals all over Gaza, the West Bank and
East Jerusalem. The area, a large stone and marble plaza lined with
Cypress trees is one of a few open spaces for Muslims in the Old
City, used for celebrations and gatherings.
"Our problem is not just the gates, our problem is the Israeli
occupation," said Walid Alhawany, 48, a shopkeeper in the Old City.
"Al Aqsa Mosque is not a place where you put security gates and you
feel like it's an Israeli institution."
(Additional reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi; Editing by Luke Baker
and Louise Ireland)
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