(Reuters) -
Israel and the Palestinians have pledged to take concrete steps to calm
tensions around Jerusalem's holiest site, U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry said on Thursday after talks in the Jordanian capital. Violence has flared in
recent weeks over the compound, revered by Muslims as Noble Sanctuary,
where al-Aqsa mosque stands, and by Jews as the Temple Mount, where
their biblical temples once stood. Clashes between Israeli police and Palestinians have raised fears they could trigger a new Palestinian uprising. All
parties had agreed to "specific and practical actions that both sides
can take to restore calm," said Kerry, declining to say what those
actions were. "Today, we
are working to smother the sparks of immediate tension so that they
don’t become a fire that is absolutely out of control," Kerry added,
flanked by Jordanian Foreign Minister Naser Judeh. Jordan has custody
over the sites. He spoke
after an unusual, nearly three-hour meeting with Jordan's King Abdullah
and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Egyptian President Abdel
Fattah al-Sisi joined in over the phone and promised to encourage
resumption of collapsed Palestinian-Israeli talks, Kerry added. Kerry
met earlier in the day with Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas. But
Abbas did not attend the three-way meeting with Netanyahu, a sign of
deep distrust between Israel and the Palestinians. Ultra-nationalists
in Israel are challenging a decades-long ban on Jews praying at the
Temple Mount. But Judeh said Netanyahu had showed "commitment" to
maintaining the status quo at the site and respecting the Jordanian
monarchy's custodianship of holy sites. Judeh
said Jordan would not return its ambassador to Tel Aviv, whom it
recalled last week in protest against Israeli actions, until it saw
concrete evidence of measures to defuse tensions. "Israel has to remove all the elements of instability that we are seeing. We have to wait and see if this is done," he said. Earlier,
Abdullah accused Israel of "repeated attacks" on holy sites in
Jerusalem and said they must stop. Jordanian religious officials who
administer the Muslim sites have said there has been an unprecedented
number of raids by ultra nationalists inside the mosque this year.
Netanyahu has accused Palestinians in the West Bank of fomenting
violence. Jordanian
officials fear wider unrest in the West Bank could spill over into their
own country, where a majority of the population are descendents of
Palestinians who fled across the river Jordan following the creation of
Israel in 1948.
Israel, Palestinians agree to steps to calm Jerusalem tensions, Kerry says
Reuters
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