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Israel provokes the holy city

Zarvan

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Israeli border police run during clashes with Palestinians [AP]
Israel's actions in the last few months alone suggest a strategy of constant provocation against the Palestinians, but one that entails successive rather than simultaneous flashpoints. This summer Israel went on a rampage in the West Bank, followed by an invasion of Gaza, and now a series of escalations in East Jerusalem.

Perhaps the thinking is that this piecemeal approach can better contain fallout, and thus enable Israel to steadily pursue its overall objectives of occupation, colonisation, and dispossession. This is an incendiary strategy that, particularly in the context of East Jerusalem's holy sites, dangerously underestimates Palestinian anger and frustration.

The past year has seen an increase in warnings from Palestinian, Israeli, American, and UN officials thatanother Intifada (uprising) is on the horizon. Rather than heeding such warnings, Israel's actions are serving to make this a distinct possibility. If its devastating campaigns in the West Bank and Gaza brought the situation to the brink, its provocations in East Jerusalem could tip it over the edge.

The last few weeks in particular have witnessed the storming, desecration and closure of the Haram al-Sharif compound - one of Islam's holiest sites - visits to the compound by Israeli extremists, and stringent restrictions on Muslim worship.

Stone-throwing punishable

Israel's response to inevitable Palestinian unrest has been violent crackdowns on protests, home demolitions, announcements of 1,500 new settlements in East Jerusalem, statements that the city is Israel's "eternal and indivisible capital", and draft legislation making stone-throwing punishable by up to 20 years in prison.


Inside Story - Turmoil at Al-Aqsa Mosque
"The result is the greatest period of unrest the city has experienced since the second Palestinian uprising ... began in 2000," Reuters reported.

Have Israelis so quickly forgotten that it was sparked by then-Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's heavily armed visit to the Haram al-Sharif? Yet, who does Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu blame for recent history repeating itself? Hamas and the Palestinian Authority of course, as Sharon did then.

Unrest has spread across the occupied territories, and Hamas has announced the establishment of a "popular army" to defend the Haram al-Sharif, the closure of which Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas described as "tantamount to a declaration of war". He added that it should be defended "with all means".

These are unusually strong words from someone who has previously expressed opposition to armed resistance or another uprising. Perhaps Abbas realises he may not be able to stand in its way.

Before the current unrest in Jerusalem, it could be convincingly argued that conditions were not ripe for another Intifada, as the Palestinians, while understandably fed up with their plight, are too politically and geographically divided. However, passions run so high over Jerusalem's holy sites that an uprising may occur spontaneously, as happened previously, and may paper over existing divisions.

The Haram al-Sharif is not just a religious symbol to Palestinians but a national one, and today's anger is the result of years of Israeli violations in East Jerusalem, which was captured in 1967 and illegally annexed in 1980. Relentless settlement expansion has cut Jerusalem off from the West Bank, and is steadily Judaising the city at the expense of its Palestinian residents, who are discriminated against in numerous ways.

Israeli extremism

Particular sensitivity over the Haram al-Sharif is understandable given past arson attacks and raids, excavations underneath it, attempts to assert Israeli control over it, and calls for its destruction to make way for a Jewish temple. Such calls and attempts have become increasingly mainstream in a society that has shifted dangerously to the right.

Israel's actions over the Haram al-Sharif are not just inflammatory to Palestinians but to the entire Muslim world, where there have been widespread condemnations and demonstrations.


It is ironic, then, that Netanyahu, who has done so much to foster Israeli extremism, should now call on MPs to show "responsibility and restraint" over the current crisis. With members of his own government and Likud party openly defying him and pouring further fuel on the fire, he is either trying to portray himself as a voice of reason while conducting business as usual, or he has helped create a monster over which he has lost a degree of control.

Israel's actions over the Haram al-Sharif are not just inflammatory to Palestinians but to the entire Muslim world, where there have been widespread condemnations and demonstrations. Perhaps most strikingly, Jordan - traditionally a dependable neighbour - has, for the first time since making peace with Israel 20 years ago, recalled its ambassador in protest.



Amman has also warned that it may review the peace treaty - which recognises Jordan's custodianship over the compound - if Israel changes the status quo there, describing Jerusalem as a "red line".

As thousands of Jordanian protesters call for the scrapping of the treaty, Netanyahu has given assurances that Israel will not change the status quo. However, there is understandable scepticism over his sincerity, and future prime ministers may not feel the same way.

Reaction from the region's governments have varied between calls for action from the international community - which will do nothing, as usual - or familiar strong words and empty threats.

However, Israel should understand that continued provocations in East Jerusalem could lead to a point where governments are either forced to act so as not to face the wrath of their own people, or their suppression of public anger will lead to radicalisation and violence that could target Israeli and Jewish people and interests worldwide. Israel seems to be playing with fire without realising how far and furiously it could spread.

Sharif Nashashibi is an award-winning journalist and analyst on Arab affairs. He is a regular contributor to Al Jazeera English, Al Arabiya News, The National, The Middle East magazine and the Middle East Eye.

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.
Israel provokes the holy city - Opinion - Al Jazeera English
 
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why did israel allowed some monkeys to enter the Mosq and let this monkeys dancing?
 
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I didn't get an alert from you. Initially they said it was a 14 year old girl. That was a lie, and it was a woman. All three were illegal settlers. It's unfortunate there is violence like this but what do you expect when Israel just announced it will confiscate 3,000 acres of Palestinian land over the 2,000 settlements past green line announced 2 weeks ago. The Palestinians are running out of time and put up self defense immediately.

Settlers are illegal trespassers along with Israeli military personnel in the Occupied West Bank and it is no wonder they're being targeted. The past week has seen unusual amount of clashes and back and forth violence(Difference is one side is acting in defense and other side is killing to enhance/advance occupation) but I wouldn't call it a third intifada yet but it may be looming over the horizon.
 
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@ResurgentIran

Pretty soon they will announce yet another land confiscation on top of the 3,000 acres and separate 2,000 settlements in East Jerusalem which is beyond green line and clearly recognized as Palestinian territory.

And lets see what international law says about that...:

Fourth Geneva Convention - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Collective punishments

Article 33. No persons may be punished for an offense he or she has not personally committed. Collective penalties and likewise all measures of intimidation or of terrorism are prohibited.
Pillage is prohibited.
Reprisals against persons and their property are prohibited.

Under the 1949 Geneva Conventions, collective punishment is a war crime. By collective punishment, the drafters of the Geneva Conventions had in mind the reprisal killings of World War I and World War II. In the First World War, during the Rape of Belgium, the Germans executed Belgian villagers in mass retribution for resistance activity. In World War II, the Germans carried out a form of collective punishment to suppress resistance. Entire villages or towns or districts were held responsible for any resistance activity that occurred in them.[3] The conventions, to counter this, reiterated the principle of individual responsibility.

...........

Israel is isolating itself, it needs to decrease tensions and not increase them. While cooperate with international peace efforts instead of derailing them.
 
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There is a danger that the Palestinian Authority would drive Christians out of Jerusalem like they did Bethlehem.
 
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There is a danger that the Palestinian Authority would drive Christians out of Jerusalem like they did Bethlehem.

Jerusalem should be an international city belonging to all 3 Abrahamic faiths.
 
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Don't you mean all four? Don't forget the Bahais!:D

No.:lol:

When did they had a claim on Jerusalem ? o_O

And if we're at it ,i'd ban Jehova's witnesses and other Evanghelists from it to.I hate them on my door-"Have you heard the news?"..."My boot up your a$$ freak---that's the news!"
 
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Wtf? Are you joking? o_O
Nazareth once predominantly Christian city now have only 20% of Christian population, the same is for all historic cities, Bethlehem is not an exception, Bethlehem by the way is a Hebrew city with Hebrew name, in translation from Hebrew Bethlehem is house of bread.
 
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Nazareth once predominantly Christian city now have only 20% of Christian population, the same is for all historic cities, Bethlehem is not an exception, Bethlehem by the way is a Hebrew city with Hebrew name, in translation from Hebrew Bethlehem is house of bred.
Not just Palestinian territories either. Christians are being driven out of Iraq and Syria (which Britain sadly is partly responsible for). They were nearly driven out of Egypt as well. Only Lebanon is safe.
 
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Nazareth once predominantly Christian city now have only 20% of Christian population, the same is for all historic cities, Bethlehem is not an exception, Bethlehem by the way is a Hebrew city with Hebrew name, in translation from Hebrew Bethlehem is house of bred.

Are you stupid? Nazareth had a tiny population prior to 1948, no more than 15,000. With around 60% Christian, Jewish militias didn't ethnically cleanse them during the war because it would get Western backlash as the city was majority Christian. The other cities were ethnically cleansed. And Nazareth was used to host some of those refugees displaced. Which was around 20-23 thousand people. And that is why the demographics were altered.

Anyone trying to draw a correlation here as if it had something to do with imaginary Muslim on Christian violence/tensions is an idiot that has knowledge on this conflict. Or someone that intentionally is instigating. Which is what you're doing, no one brought religion up here. Religion has nothing to do with this, Palestinians don't have sectarian differences amongst them. This is a case of indigenous population coming under attack/major ethnic cleansing at the hands of the one and only Zionists.

@al-Hasani
 
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