Israel's Ben-Gvir visits Al Aqsa mosque compound, Palestinians incensed
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[January 03, 2023]
By Dan Williams
JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Israel's new far-right national security minister
Itamar Ben-Gvir briefly visited Al-Aqsa mosque compound in Jerusalem on
Tuesday, a site also revered by Jews, prompting fierce condemnation from
the Palestinians and several Arab countries.
"The Temple Mount is open to all," Ben-Gvir said on Twitter, using the
Jewish name for the site. Video footage showed him strolling at the
periphery of the compound, surrounded by a heavy security detail and
flanked by a fellow Orthodox Jew.
An Israeli official said the 15-minute visit by Ben-Gvir, a top member
of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's nationalist-religious cabinet,
complied with a so-called status-quo arrangement dating back decades
that allows non-Muslims to visit on condition they do not pray. He did
not approach the mosque.
Although the visit passed without incident, it risks stoking tensions
with Palestinians that have already been running high after an upsurge
in violence in the occupied West Bank in the past year.
Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh called on Palestinians to
"confront the raids into Al Aqsa mosque". He accused Ben-Gvir of staging
the visit as part of a bid to turn the shrine "into a Jewish temple".
Israel denies having such designs. Ben-Gvir once advocated ending a ban
on Jewish prayer at the site, but has been more non-committal on the
issue since aligning with Netanyahu. Other members of his Jewish Power
party still advocate such a move.
The rise of Ben-Gvir in Netanyahu's government, one of the most
right-wing in Israel's history, has deepened Palestinian anger about
their long-failed efforts to secure a state.
Hours before the visit, Israeli troops shot dead a Palestinian teenager
in a clash in nearby Bethlehem, medical officials and witnesses said,
latest in a growing death toll in the West Bank. Israel's army said
troops fired on Palestinians who threw improvised explosives, rocks and
firebombs at them.
A spokesman for Hamas, a Palestinian Islamist group that rejects
coexistence with Israel and which controls Gaza, said of Ben-Gvir's
visit: "A continuation of this behaviour will bring all parties closer
to a big clash."
BLEAK OUTLOOK
Al Aqsa is a symbol for Palestinian hopes of securing a state, a goal
that looks ever bleaker with Ben-Gvir and other far-right allies now in
Netanyahu's government.
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Itamar Ben Gvir, a new minister of
national security, attends a cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, December
29, 2022.Ariel Schalit/Pool via REUTERS
U.S. ambassador to Israel, Thomas Nides, "has been very clear in
conversations with the Israeli government on the issue of preserving
the status quo in Jerusalem’s holy sites", the embassy said in a
statement, adding that "actions that prevent that are unacceptable"
without elaborating.
Jordan, the custodian of Al Aqsa and whose peace deal with Israel is
unpopular at home, criticised the visit, saying it had violated
international law and "the historic and legal status quo in
Jerusalem".
Egypt and United Arab Emirates, which are among the few Arab states
to have recognised Israel, also condemned the visit. Saudi Arabia,
with which Netanyahu wants to forge a peace deal, also criticised
Ben Gvir's action.
The Al Aqsa compound, known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary, is
Islam's third-holiest site. It is also Judaism's most sacred site, a
vestige of two ancient temples of the faith.
On Tuesday, pious Jews fasted to commemorate a Babylonian siege on
the first of those temples, in the 6th century BC.
Ben-Gvir oversees Israeli police who are formally tasked with
enforcing the ban on Jewish prayer at the compound.
Israel deems all of Jerusalem its indivisible capital - a status not
recognised internationally. Palestinians want East Jerusalem, where
the compound is located, as capital of a future state also taking in
the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
"If Hamas thinks that it can deter me with threats, it should
understand that times have changed," Ben-Gvir said on Twitter.
"There is a government in Jerusalem!"
Netanyahu, now in his sixth term as premier, has pledged to preserve
the "status quo" around holy sites. Ben-Gvir said on Tuesday that
"freedom of movement" would be upheld at the Jerusalem compound,
without any mention of freedom of worship.
(Additional reporting by Ali Sawafta, Nidal al-Mughrabi, Ari
Rabinovitch, and Suleiman al-Khalidi; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan
and Edmund Blair)
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