Gaza rockets, Israel strikes stoke new Jerusalem clashes
Jerusalem – Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip and Israeli warplanes exchanged fire Thursday in the biggest escalation in months, followed by fresh violence at Jerusalem’s flashpoint Al-Aqsa mosque.
Israel carried out air strikes in central Gaza after midnight, hours after a rocket fired by militants hit the garden of a house in southern Israel — the first such fire to hit the Jewish state since January.
The military said it had hit an underground rocket factory, prompting another volley of at least four more rockets from the impoverished territory run by Islamist movement Hamas.
The exchanges come after nearly a month of deadly violence in Israel and the Palestinian territories, focused on Jerusalem’s super-sensitive Al-Aqsa mosque compound, known to Jews as the Temple Mount.
Israeli police fired tear gas and multiple stun grenades inside the compound in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem again on Thursday, AFP journalists reported.
The Palestinian Red Crescent said its medics were treating a person who was hit in the face with a rubber-coated steel bullet inside Al-Aqsa.
Israeli police said dozens of “rioters” had thrown stones and petrol bombs from the mosque.
“A violent splinter group is stopping Muslim worshippers from entering the mosque and causing damage to the site,” the police claimed.
Seven Palestinians from east Jerusalem were arrested in connection with “violent incidents” on Wednesday.
– US delegation –
Nearly a month of deadly violence have sparked international fears of a major escalation, a year after similar unrest led to an 11-day war.
US acting Assistant Secretary of State Yael Lempert and senior diplomat Hady Amr visited the region on Thursday.
After meeting them, Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid called for calm, saying Israel “will not accept, in any situation, rocket fire from the Gaza Strip”.
Israel is “preserving and will continue to preserve the status quo on the Temple Mount”, Lapid said, contradicting Palestinian claims.
But Arab ministers meeting in neighbouring Amman said Israel should respect the status quo at the site, which is officially overseen by Jordan’s Islamic Affairs ministry.
The ministers condemned “Israeli attacks and violations against worshippers at the Al-Aqsa Mosque”, calling them “a blatant provocation to the feelings of Muslims everywhere”.
Tensions have been particularly high as the Jewish Passover festival coincides with the Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan.
Palestinians and Israeli Arabs carried out four deadly attacks in Israel in March and early April that claimed 14 lives, mostly civilians.
A total of 23 Palestinians have been killed since March 22, including assailants who targeted Israelis, according to an AFP tally.
Palestinians have been outraged by repeated visits by Israeli Jews to the Al-Aqsa mosque compound — Islam’s third-holiest site.
By long-standing convention, Jews are allowed to visit, but not pray in the compound, which is also Judaism’s holiest site.
– ‘Death to the Arabs’ –
On Wednesday, Israeli police prevented hundreds of far-right Jewish nationalists from parading through the Muslim quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City.
Last year, a similar march had been set to start when Hamas launched a barrage of rockets towards Israel, sparking the 11-day war.
Far-right lawmaker Itamar Ben Gvir, a controversial opposition politician, led this year’s protest after being barred from the Damascus Gate area by Prime Minister Naftali Bennett.
On Wednesday, more than a thousand of his supporters gathered outside the Old City, some shouting “death to the Arabs!”.
“I’ll say it clearly, I’m not going to blink, not going to fold,” Ben Gvir told AFP, as youth behind him chanted “Bennett go home!”.
“Some Jews don’t surrender to Hamas,” he said.
On Tuesday, Israel had carried out its first strike on Gaza in months, in response to the first rocket fire since January from the Palestinian enclave, which was intercepted by Israeli air defences.
Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said Thursday that the movement was “determined to continue the struggle side by side with the Palestinian people to resist (Israeli) aggression no matter the sacrifices”.
The escalation has proved a political headache for Bennett, himself a right-winger and a key figure in Israel’s settlement movement but who leads an ideologically divided coalition government.
This month, the coalition lost its wafer-thin majority in parliament, after one MP defected over the use of leavened bread products in hospitals during Passover.
Then on Sunday, the Raam party, drawn from the country’s Arab minority, suspended its support for the coalition over the Al-Aqsa violence.
Nationalist MPs are under pressure to quit the coalition, which the right-wing opposition charges is too favourable to Palestinians and Israel’s Arab minority.