Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said Al-Aqsa mosque compound in Jerusalem’s Old City will gradually reopen on Sunday, two days after the unprecedented closure heightened Israeli-Palestinian tensions. It will reopen with further precautions, such as metal detectors and the installation of security cameras at the entrance gates, Al-Jazeera reports.
“I held a discussion with the top security leadership, and I instructed that metal detectors be placed at the entrance gate to the Temple Mount. We will also install security cameras outside the Temple Mount, in a way that gives us almost complete control over what goes on there,” Netanyahu said in his statement late Saturday night.
The sensitive site was shut down on Friday after three Arab citizens of Israel shot two Israeli officers dead in the Old City before fleeing to the Al Aqsa compound where they were killed by police.
Sheikh Ikrima Sabri, the former grand Mufti of Jerusalem and Palestinian territories, said on Saturday that the closure was a “collective punishment” that affected thousands of worshippers, adds Al-Jazeera.
“This is unprecedented. The mosque has not been closed for centuries. The situation is dangerous,” said Adnan Husseini, Palestinian Authority’s Jerusalem governor, at a press conference on Saturday.
Israeli authorities are “inflating this situation”, he said. “We live in a conflict and there’s violence almost daily. Palestinians are killed in cold blood almost daily at checkpoints, Husseini adds.”
Bassam Al Halaq, a senior official of Awqaf, an Islamic authority in charge of Al-Aqsa, told Al-Jazeera that the Israeli police were searching the entire compound, breaking through doors.
“To this point the noble sanctuary remains closed and all chambers inside it are being searched by the Israeli police. If a chamber is locked, the lock is broken. Only three Awqaf employees are allowed on the site, including the chief electrical engineer,” Halaq said.
The sensitive site
The mosque compound is known to Muslims as al-Haram al-Sharif while Jews call it Temple Mount.
In 2015, Israeli soldiers stormed the mosque that resulted in days of violence and clashes. Palestinians fear an increased incursion of Israeli right-wing groups into the mosque compound.
Jordan, the custodian of the Al-Aqsa mosque compound, has urged Israel to “immediately reopen” it, while the Arab League called its closure “dangerous”.
Netanyahu has promised to honour long-standing access agreements, saying the status quo governing the site “will be preserved”.
The compound lies in east Jerusalem, occupied by Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War and later annexed in a move that was never recognised by the international community, adds Al-Jazeera.
Jews are allowed to visit, but are banned from praying there to avoid provoking tensions. They pray at the western wall of the compound, which is considered the holiest site for Jews.
In a phone call with Netanyahu, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on Friday expressed his “strong rejection and condemnation of the incident” and rejected “any act of violence from any side, especially in places of worship”, according to the official Palestinian news agency, WAFA.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has warned the attack could spark more violence and urged all sides to avoid escalation.
Source: PNN
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