The most senior
Islamic cleric in Jerusalem said on Sunday Israeli police hurled stun
grenades into al-Aqsa mosque, Islam's third holiest site, to quell the
latest in a string of Palestinian protests at the politically sensitive
holy site. Israeli police denied
the allegation, saying officers threw the non-lethal devices, which emit
a loud noise, on a plaza outside the mosque after protesters threw
rocks and firecrackers at them. The
demonstrators, who have confronted police for the past four days in a
bid to stop Israeli and foreign visitors from entering the holy
compound, then retreated into al-Aqsa, a police spokesman said. Tensions
at the site run high during Jewish holidays - Jews are now celebrating
Passover - when Palestinians are on alert against any attempt by Jews to
pray on the compound in defiance of a de facto Israeli government ban
on such worship. Five
Palestinians and two police officers were reported injured in Sunday's
face-off at the complex revered by Jews as Temple Mount and by Muslims
as the Noble Sanctuary. Police said they arrested 16 Palestinians during
the latest protests. Israeli
security forces, while operating on the holy compound, shy away from
entering al-Aqsa and the Dome of the Rock shrine at the complex situated
in the walled Old City of Jerusalem. Israel captured East Jerusalem, along with the West Bank, in the 1967 Middle East war. Grand
Mufti Mohammed Hussein said he was present at Sunday's protests and
said police "threw the sound bombs into the (al-Aqsa) mosque itself". Hussein
did not say how many grenades landed inside the mosque. "We condemn
this is unacceptable and very dangerous escalation," he added. GRENADE ASSAULT DENIED Israeli
police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld denied grenades were thrown inside the
mosque saying Arab protesters had "retreated into the mosque where they
knew we would not enter." Hussein
said Israeli police also fired tear gas and rubber bullets at the
protesters, but only outside the mosque, injuring five people. Rosenfeld
denied any weapons were discharged other than the stun grenades. Palestinian
concerns have been heightened because allies of Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu are among the most vocal advocates of Jewish prayer
at the 25-acre complex, which also houses the Dome of the Rock, where
Muslims believe the Prophet Mohammad ascended to heaven. A
visit in 2000 to the holy site by then-Israeli opposition leader Ariel
Sharon after peace talks broke down was followed by a five-year-long
Palestinian uprising. Tensions
at the holy site coincided with a crisis in Israeli-Palestinian peace
talks, at risk of collapse unless negotiators can agree to extend their
talks beyond an April 29 deadline set by U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry. Sovereignty over
the compound is at the heart of the Arab-Israeli conflict. Palestinians
want to make East Jerusalem the capital of the state they aim to
establish in the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Israel, citing historical and biblical links, regards all of Jerusalem as its capital, a claim that is not recognized internationally.
Top Palestinian cleric says Israel threw stun grenades into al Aqsa; Israel denies
Reuters
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