Cross-border rockets fired from Gaza after Israeli police raid Al-Aqsa
mosque
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[April 05, 2023]
By Nidal al-Mughrabi and Sinan Abu Mayzer
GAZA/JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Israeli police entered Jerusalem's Al-Aqsa
mosque in force before dawn on Wednesday and clashed with worshippers,
drawing condemnation from Arab countries and a furious reaction in the
occupied West Bank and crossborder strikes in Gaza.
The incident, during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan and on the eve of
the Jewish Passover, came amid fears that tensions built up during a
year of escalating Israeli-Palestinian violence could be unleashed at
the Al-Aqsa mosque, known to Jews as the Temple Mount.
Palestinian militants fired at least nine rockets from Gaza into Israel
overnight, prompting air strikes from Israel which hit what it said were
weapon production sites for the Islamist group Hamas, which controls the
blockaded coastal enclave.
Hamas did not claim responsibility for the rocket attacks but said these
were in response to the Israeli raid on Al-Aqsa, where clashes in 2021
set off a 10-day war with Gaza.
As ground-shaking explosions from the airstrikes rocked Gaza, witnesses
said Israeli tanks also shelled Hamas positions. "We are not interested
in an escalation, but we are ready for any scenario," IDF spokesman
Daniel Hagari said.
As day broke, with international efforts underway to de-escalate the
situation, tensions appeared to have calmed in Al-Aqsa, where large
crowds of worshippers spent the night as is common during Ramadan.
The Palestinian Red Crescent said 12 Palestinians had sustained wounds
during the raid, including from rubber-tipped bullets and beatings, in
clashes with police. It added that Israeli forces had prevented its
medics from reaching the area.
"In the yard to the eastern part of the compound, the police fired tear
gas and stun grenades, it was a scene that I can't describe," said Fahmi
Abbas, a worshipper at the mosque. "Then they stormed in and started
beating everyone. They detained people and put the young men face down
on the ground while they continued beating them."
Videos circulating on social media, which Reuters could not
independently verify, showed fireworks going off and police beating
people inside one of the mosque buildings. Police video showed police
entering the building while fire crackers exploded in the darkness.
Israeli police said in a statement that security units were forced to
enter the compound after what it called masked agitators locked
themselves inside the mosque with fireworks, sticks and stones.
"Following many continuous attempts to remove the individuals from the
mosque using dialogue failed, police were forced to enter the compound
in order to remove the individuals," the police said.
"Throughout the presence of police forces in the compound, stones were
thrown and multiple firecrackers were set off inside the mosque by many
law-breaking individuals and rioters," the statement said, adding that
two police officers were wounded.
It said more than 350 people who had barricaded themselves inside were
arrested and removed.
Thousands of worshippers spent the night in the mosque compound, amid
fears of possible clashes with Jewish visitors to the site, which they
revere as the Temple Mount, the site of Judaism's two ancient Temples.
Under the longstanding "status quo" arrangement governing the area,
which Israel says it maintains, non-Muslims can visit but only Muslims
are allowed to worship in the mosque compound. Jewish visitors have
increasingly prayed more or less openly at the site in defiance of the
rules.
The Waqf, the Jordanian-appointed Islamic organisation that manages the
complex, considered the third holiest site in the Muslim world,
described the police actions as a "flagrant assault on the identity and
the function of the mosque as a place of worship for Muslims alone".
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Israeli security forces work at the Al-Aqsa
compound, also known to Jews as the Temple Mount, while tension
arises during clashes with Palestinians in Jerusalem's Old City,
April 5, 2023. REUTERS/Ammar Awad
CONDEMNATION
The incident drew a sharp reaction from Arab countries. Jordan and
Egypt, both involved in recent U.S.-backed efforts to de-escalate
tensions between Israel and the Palestinians, issued separate
statements strongly condemning the incident, while Saudi Arabia,
with whom Israel hopes to normalise ties, said Israel's "storming"
of Al-Aqsa undermined peace efforts.
The Palestinian Authority leadership said Israel's crossing of "red
lines" at the holy sites risked an "explosion", while the Arab
League said Israel's "extremist approaches" would lead to wider
clashes with Palestinians if they were not halted.
"Israel's aggression against the holy Al-Aqsa Mosque Compound is an
egregious assault on the basic right of Palestinians to worship
freely in their holy site," the Palestinian foreign ministry said in
a statement.
A foreign diplomat said United Nations representatives were involved
in international efforts with all parties to de-escalate the
situation.
Hazem Qassem, a spokesperson for Hamas, the Islamist group that
controls Gaza, said the overnight rocket fire was a response to the
police raid in the Al-Aqsa mosque and showed Israel would not be
able to separate Gaza from the West Bank.
"The Zionist bombardment on Gaza was a failed attempt to prevent
Gaza from continuing its support to our people in Jerusalem and the
West Bank by all means," Qassem said.
However neither Hamas, nor the Iranian-backed Islamic Jihad
movement, claimed responsibility for the attacks, which were instead
claimed by the smaller Democratic Front for the Liberation of
Palestine and the Popular Resistance Committee. The Israeli military
says it holds Hamas responsible for all attacks from Gaza.
With Israel still reeling from weeks of domestic tension over Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's bitterly contested plans to rein in
the powers of the Supreme Court, the incident added to an already
fevered political atmosphere.
Hardline Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, who has responsibility
for the police but not the armed forces, called for a harsh response
from Israel and said he had asked to convene a meeting of the
security cabinet.
"Hamas rockets require more than blasting dunes and empty sites.
It's time to rip heads off in Gaza. We must not deviate from an
equation that necessitates a serious response for each and every
rocket," he said in a tweet.
In the West Bank town of Beit Ummar, protestors burned tyres and
threw rocks and explosive devices at Israeli soldiers, one of whom
was shot and wounded. In another incident, an attacker opened fire
on an army checkpoint between Jerusalem and Bethlehem without
causing any casualties.
Over the past year, Israeli forces have made thousands of arrests in
the West Bank and killed more than 250 Palestinians, while more than
40 Israelis and three Ukrainians have died in Palestinian attacks.
Israel captured East Jerusalem, including the Old City where the Al-Aqsa
Mosque compound is located, in a 1967 war and later annexed it in a
move not recognised internationally. It regards Jerusalem as its
eternal and indivisible capital.
Palestinians want East Jerusalem for the capital of an independent
state they seek in the West Bank and Gaza.
(Reporting by Sinan Abu Mayzer, Ammar Awad, Nidal al-Mughrabi and
Ali Sawafta; Additional reporting by Nisreen Salem; Writing by
Henriette Chacar and James Mackenzie; Editing by Stephen Coates and
Raissa Kasolowsky)
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