(Reuters) - Jordan recalled its ambassador to Israel
on Wednesday in protest at an increase in Israeli "violations",
including in Jerusalem and its holy sites, the first time it has done so
since the countries made peace in 1994, government officials said.
Jordan has expressed
growing alarm over Israeli actions in Jerusalem culminating in last
week's one-day closure of the sacred compound housing Al Aqsa mosque - a
move that infuriated the Jordanian king, who is its official custodian. Tensions
over the compound, the third holiest site in Islam and the holiest
place in Judaism, have fueled daily clashes between Israeli security
forces and Palestinians in Jerusalem in recent weeks. Jordan's
government spokesman, Mohammad al-Momani, said Israeli security forces
raided the compound's main mosque on Wednesday, describing this as "a
dangerous escalation". Witnesses
told Reuters that Israeli security forces had thrown percussion
grenades inside the mosque in clashes with stone-throwing Palestinians. The
decision to recall the Jordanian ambassador was taken "in protest at
the increasing and unprecedented Israeli escalation in the Noble
Sanctuary, and the repeated Israeli violations of Jerusalem", Jordan's
Petra news agency said. The Israelis have not yet formally commented. Jordanian
Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh was due to travel to Paris to meet U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry to discuss Jerusalem, a Jordanian foreign
ministry source said. CARPET BURNT Government
spokesman Momani said part of a carpet in the mosque had been burnt
during Wednesday's raid. Jordan also plans to lodge a complaint over
Israeli actions in Jerusalem with the U.N. Security Council, he said. Explaining
Jordan's decision to withdraw the ambassador, he said: "This action was
taken to protest at the accelerated settlement building and all
unilateral steps taken by the Israeli government in East Jerusalem to
change the status quo." Israel
shut the Al Aqsa compound for one day last Thursday following an attack
on a far-right Israeli-American activist who was shot and seriously
wounded after speaking out against a ban on Jews praying at the site. Jordanian
officials said the site was reopened after the personal intervention of
King Abdullah, whose custodianship of the site was recognized in the
1994 peace treaty with Israel. The
compound, which also houses the Dome of the Rock, is run by several
hundred Jordanian government employees. Jews are not allowed to pray
there. Jordanian King
Abdullah has used unusually tough language in his recent criticism of
Israel. Last month, he equated Islamic extremism with Zionist extremism
and earlier this week vowed to confront "unilateral" Israeli policies
there.
Jordan recalls envoy to Israel over Jerusalem 'violations'
Reuters
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