(Reuters) -
Palestinian protesters fought with Israeli security forces in East
Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank on Friday, the latest clashes in a
fortnight of violence over access to Jerusalem's holiest site. At the Qalandia
checkpoint separating Ramallah from Jerusalem, troops fired rubber
bullets as several hundred protesters marched, some throwing rocks and
petrol bombs. In East
Jerusalem, police fired tear gas to disperse protesters hurling
firecrackers and burning tires that sent up huge clouds of black smoke
in Shoafat refugee camp. Palestinian
and regional anger, still simmering over Israel's war with Gaza's Hamas
movement in July and August, has focused in the last two weeks on
Jerusalem's holiest site, known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and to
Jews as Temple Mount. For
decades, Israel has maintained a ban on Jews praying at the site, which
houses the Dome of the Rock and the 8th-century al-Aqsa mosque and was
also the site of ancient Jewish temples. But
in recent weeks, protests have gathered momentum against a campaign by
far-right Jewish nationalists to be allowed to pray there. Israeli
security forces have clashed at the compound with Muslim worshippers
angry at what they see as an assault on the shrine, which is
administered by Islamic authorities, and last week Israel shut down all
access to the site for the first time in more than a decade, after a
Palestinian gunman shot an Israeli ultranationalist. Palestinian drivers
have rammed into Israeli pedestrians in the city, killing four people. RISK OF MORE VIOLENCE The
EU's new foreign affairs chief said the upsurge in violence made it all
the more critical that Israel and the Palestinians resume peace
negotiations. "The risk
of growing tensions here in Jerusalem ... is that, if we do not move
forward on the political track, we will go back, and back again to
violence," Federica Mogherini told reporters after meeting Israeli
Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman during her first official visit to
the region. The last
talks between Israel and the Palestinians broke down in April after
months of largely fruitless negotiation, with the Palestinians angry at
the continued building of Jewish settlements in occupied territory, and
Israel furious at attempts to bring the Islamist group Hamas, which
officially denies Israel's right to exist, into the Palestinian
government. Mogherini said it was time for the EU to take a bigger role in brokering peace talks, a task until now shouldered by Washington. After
meeting her, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reiterated that
the status quo governing Temple Mount would not change. At
the same time as calling for calm, Netanyahu has accused Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas of instigating the violence, putting the
prospect of any return to negotiations even further out of reach. HOMES TO BE RAZED? An
official in Netanyahu's office who declined to be named said the prime
minister had sought judicial authorization to raze the homes of
Palestinians involved in lethal attacks against Israelis. Israel
has often demolished Palestinian homes in the West Bank in retaliation
for attacks, despite the protests of human rights groups who say it
amounts to collective punishment, but it has rarely done so in
Jerusalem. The Palestinians, for their part, are far from presenting a united front. Abbas's
Fatah movement and the Gaza-based Hamas, at daggers drawn since Hamas
drove Fatah's forces out of Gaza in 2007, agreed in June to form a
"reconciliation" government, but have so far failed to put the unity
cabinet to work. On
Friday, around 15 small explosions targeted the homes and vehicles of
Fatah officials in Gaza, causing minor damage but no injuries, witnesses
and members of Fatah said. One
of the targets hit was a stage where the 10th anniversary of the death
of Yasser Arafat, the late Palestinian president and Fatah leader, is to
be commemorated on Nov. 11. Fatah and Hamas blamed each other for the blasts. "We
will not allow the return of internal conflicts, chaos and anarchy to
the Gaza Strip," said Eyad Al-Bozom, a spokesman for the Interior
Ministry, run by officials loyal to Hamas. "The security services will pursue anyone who had any connection to these criminal acts." The
tension between Fatah and Hamas has hampered efforts to rebuild Gaza
after the July-August war, in which more than 2,100 Palestinians were
killed, as well as more than 70 Israelis. Mogherini was due to visit Gaza on Saturday for talks with Abbas and Palestinian Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah.
Palestinians clash with Israeli troops again over holy site
Reuters
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