Palestinians reject new Israeli security measure for entrance to Al-Aqsa
Palestinian worshippers congregated for prayers outside one of the main entrances to the Al-Aqsa mosque, refusing to enter because of new metal detectors installed at entrances as the holy site re-opened for the first time on Sunday since a two-day closure following a deadly shootout.
- World
- Compiled from wire services
- Published Date: 12:00 | 16 July 2017
- Modified Date: 03:27 | 16 July 2017
The Palestinian Minister of Jerusalem says arrangements at a Jerusalem hole site need to return to how they were before a deadly attack.
Adnan Husseini says Sunday the Palestinians will not accept Israeli security alternation for entrance to the site. Though he acknowledged that there was violence he said it "shouldn't be an excuse for making changes."
Israel reopened the compound — known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and to Jews as the Temple Mount — after Israel imposed new security measures, including metal detectors at the entrance gates and additional security cameras. For the first time in decades, Israel closed the site Friday after shootout which killed two Israeli police officers and three Palestinians.
Sheikh Omar Qiswani, head of the Islamic Waqf, which manages the mosque, told the Muslim worshippers at Lion's Gate not to enter if they have to go through searches.
"We will not receive the Al-Aqsa mosque, except as it was," Qiswani said, rejecting changes made in the aftermath of Friday's shootout, which killed two Israeli police officers and three Palestinians.
The mosque was completely closed for two days after the attack, including the weekly Friday prayers, as were most entrances to the wider Old City area.
In statements ahead of his departure to Paris late Saturday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he had ordered metal detectors installed at the gates as part of new security measures to be introduced at the holy site, also revered by Jews as the Temple Mount.
Palestinians waiting at another entrance to the mosque did enter and police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said around 200 worshippers had been allowed through for the midday prayers.
"We will also install security cameras on poles outside the Temple Mount [Al-Aqsa compound] but which give almost complete control over what goes on there. I decided that as of tomorrow, in the framework of our policy of maintaining the status-quo, we will gradually open the Temple Mount, but with increased security measures," he said.
Islamic Waqf spokesman Firas Dibs confirmed reports that workers from the Israeli-run Jerusalem municipality had entered the site Sunday morning to clean it before it was reopened-a move they said was unprecedented.
The Waqf said police have confiscated keys to the site and dozens of officers had been stationed outside the main mosque.
Meanwhile, a Palestinian was killed in the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh, and another arrested, after he allegedly opened fire on Israeli forces during an overnight raid Sunday.
An Israeli police statement said 34-year-old Amar Khalil was suspected of carrying out two shootings in the occupied West Bank on Saturday.