World News | New Players Pose Additional Threats to Jerusalem Tensions

Get latest articles and stories on World at LatestLY. Competing claims to the holy city of Jerusalem have long fuelled fighting between Israel and the Palestinians. But a new mix of players, including Gaza militants and Jewish Israeli extremists, have made the latest round of violence particularly combustible.

Jerusalem, Apr 25 (AP) Competing claims to the holy city of Jerusalem have long fuelled fighting between Israel and the Palestinians. But a new mix of players, including Gaza militants and Jewish Israeli extremists, have made the latest round of violence particularly combustible.

The unrest has been characterised by nightly clashes between Palestinian youths and Jerusalem police outside the walls of Jerusalem's Old City.

Over the weekend, anti-Arab Israeli extremists, apparently emboldened by the election of their allies to parliament, entered the fray with a march calling for violence against Arabs.

Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip fired an intense barrage of rockets into southern Israel with rocket fire. And political posturing by Israeli and Palestinian leaders has added to the tense atmosphere.

Here is a closer look at what's at stake:

Israel captured east Jerusalem, along with the West Bank and Gaza Strip, in the 1967 Mideast war.

The Palestinians claim all three areas for a future independent state, with east Jerusalem as their capital. Israel annexed east Jerusalem after the war and views the entire city as its unified capital.

The fate of Jerusalem and its holy sites is one of the most explosive issues in the conflict, and the city has seen many waves of violence over the years.

The second Palestinian uprising in the early 2000s and a 50-day war between Israel and Gaza's Islamic militant Hamas rulers both were both rooted in Jerusalem tensions.

When the US moved its embassy to Jerusalem in 2018, nearly 60 Palestinians were killed by Israeli fire that day in a violent protest along Gaza's frontier with Israel.

The immediate spark for the current round of unrest was Israel's decision to barricade a plaza outside of Jerusalem's Old City during the holy month of Ramadan.

Palestinians traditionally gather at the spot each evening after prayers and a daylong fast.

Angry that their popular gathering spot was taken away, hundreds of young Palestinian men have taken to the streets each evening. Crowds have hurled stones, firebombs and other objects at police, while officers have used stun grenades and water cannons to disperse them. Dozens of people have been hurt.

The crackdown has touched on Palestinian fears that Israel is trying to deepen its control over east Jerusalem.

In recent weeks, for instance, Palestinians and rights groups have held demonstrations against legal maneuvers by Jewish settler groups to take over properties and expel residents from their homes.

“All we wanted to do is to be able to sit on the stairs of Damascus Gate at night to drink coffee or tea,” said Rami, a 24-year-old resident who asked that his last name be withheld because he feared arrest.

“It's a tradition for Old City residents to go outside for refreshments. My father used to sit on the stairs of Damascus Gate before me,” he said. “What police are trying to do is simply erase our identity.”

On Thursday night, a far-right Israeli group called Lehava staged a massive demonstration just a few hundred meters (yards) from the Palestinian crowds.

It said the march was a response to TikTok videos showing Palestinians slapping religious Jews at random. Although police kept the sides apart, Lehava protesters chanted “Death to Arabs” and “Arabs Get Out.”

Early Saturday, Gaza militants responded by firing 36 rockets into Israel, the most intense barrage in over a year.

Israel retaliated with a series of airstrikes on Hamas targets, raising the risk of further escalation.

With the Palestinians scheduled to hold elections next month, both President Mahmoud Abbas and his Hamas rivals have tried to portray themselves as defenders of Jerusalem.

Abbas is threatening to postpone the election unless Israel allows Palestinians in east Jerusalem to vote. It has not announced its position but appears unlikely to cave in. That could give Abbas, whose Fatah party is expected to do poorly in the vote, a pretext to cancel the vote. But it could also heighten tensions in Jerusalem.(AP)

(The above story is verified and authored by Press Trust of India (PTI) staff. PTI, India’s premier news agency, employs more than 400 journalists and 500 stringers to cover almost every district and small town in India.. The views appearing in the above post do not reflect the opinions of LatestLY)

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