Police arrest dozens in Jerusalem clashes; Israeli nationalists chant
'Death to Arabs"
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[April 23, 2021]
By Stephen Farrell and Rami Ayyub
JERUSALEM (Reuters) -After a night of
violence in Jerusalem, Israeli police made over 50 arrests and
Palestinian medics said 100 were injured during Ramadan clashes in the
contested city at the core of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
From late Thursday night into early Friday, police in riot gear and on
horseback fought to keep apart two groups of protesters - Palestinian
youth hurling firecrackers and setting fire to garbage bins, and
ultra-nationalist Israelis chanting anti-Arab slogans.
Police deployed armoured vehicles spraying foul-smelling skunk water
towards the two groups - Palestinians gathered around Jerusalem's
historic Damascus Gate and hundreds of right-wing Israelis several
hundred metres away.
Clashes and other violent incidents between Palestinians and Israelis
have occurred nightly since the start of the Muslim fasting month of
Ramadan.
Palestinians say police have tried to prevent them from holding their
usual Ramadan evening gatherings outside Damascus Gate, an historic
landmark on the north side of the Old City and adjacent to several
Palestinian neighbourhoods.
Meanwhile, a video on social media app TikTok purporting to show a
Palestinian slapping an ultra-Orthodox Jewish man on Jerusalem's light
rail train has drawn protests by Israelis and calls by far-right
politicians for tougher police action.
The incidents have threatened to break a sustained period of relative
quiet in the holy city. On Thursday night, hundreds of ultra-nationalist
Israelis - many of them young and religious - marched through central
Jerusalem towards the Damascus Gate, which police had barricaded as a
precaution.
As they marched, many chanted "Death to Arabs" and some waved banners
reading: "Death to terrorists".
One participant, David, 40, said he lived far from Jerusalem but "came
here to support my own people", adding: "I'm Jewish and I'm a patriot
and I'm proud of my country."
Police fired skunk water at the Israelis, pushing them away from their
position at the Old City's New Gate - just 600 metres (yards) away from
Palestinians gathered at Damascus Gate - and towards Jerusalem's central
Jaffa Road.
U.S. SEEKS RETURN TO CALM
In a statement in English, Hebrew and Arabic, the U.S. Embassy said it
was "deeply concerned" about the violence.
"We hope all responsible voices will promote an end to incitement, a
return to calm, and respect for the safety and dignity of everyone in
Jerusalem," it said.
The anti-Arab slogans appeared to draw a rebuke from far-right Israeli
politician Itamar Ben-Gvir.
"I am against such chants," he told radio station 102 FM, while
defending the Jewish demonstrators' right to protest.
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Israeli police officers stand next to a burning barricade during
clashes with Palestinians, as the Muslim holy fasting month of
Ramadan continues, in Jerusalem, April 22, 2021. REUTERS/Ammar Awad
He added: "There are many Arabs among us who are
loyal. But I certainly think that those of them among us who lynch,
who beat up, cause harm - they should be roughed up, they should be
thrown out of here."
Asked what he meant by "roughed up", Ben-Gvir said it meant
prosecuting them and also "if we manage to pass legislation, also
throwing them out of the country."
As Palestinians heard reports of the Israeli crowd approaching, they
gathered near Damascus Gate with ambulances racing up and down
crowded backstreets with sirens blaring.
Police sealed off the area to prevent the Israeli and Palestinian
crowds from potentially meeting. The Palestinians dragged garbage
bins, some of them ablaze, into the roads on their side to disrupt
police and block them from their side. Some discharged small
fireworks towards police.
In all, police said they arrested over 50 people overnight, without
distinguishing between Israelis and Palestinians. The Palestine Red
Crescent said 100 Palestinians had been injured, with 21 taken to
hospital but none of them serious.
RAMADAN DISPUTE
The Palestinian clashes with Israeli police began with the start of
Ramadan, on April 13. Palestinians say police have tried to prevent
them from holding their usual Ramadan evening gatherings outside
Damascus Gate.
"Palestinians love to relax in this area after evening prayers at
Al-Aqsa Mosque, but the occupation (Israel) doesn't like it. It's a
matter of sovereignty," said Jerusalem resident Mohammad Abu Al-Homus,
pointing to metal barricades thrown up by police in the area in
recent weeks.
Police say the measure is part of efforts to ensure Muslim
worshippers can safely get to the main Islamic prayer site in the
Old City, known as the Noble Sanctuary.
"Since Damascus Gate is the main way to reach and enter the Old
City, police forces carry out field activities using various means
to prevent friction, violence and confrontation, and to maintain
order and security ... ," said a police spokesman.
Israel claims all of Jerusalem, including the eastern sector
captured in the 1967 Middle East war, as its capital. Palestinians
seek to make East Jerusalem, including its Muslim, Christian and
Jewish holy sites, capital of a future state.
(Additional reporting by Dan WilliamsEditing by William Maclean)
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