Police clash with protesters at Jerusalem Al-Aqsa mosque
Israeli police Tuesday entered the sensitive Al-Aqsa mosque
compound in Jerusalem's Old City to disperse stone-throwing Palestinian
protesters, a police spokesman said.
The clashes came as parliament was to debate a bill calling
for Israeli sovereignty over the compound, Islam's third-holiest site, which is
currently administered by Jordan.
Police used stun grenades to disperse the Palestinians,
Micky Rosenfeld told AFP, adding that there was "high tension" ahead
of discussions expected in the Israeli parliament later Tuesday of a plan to
annex the site, known to Jews as the Temple Mount.
He added that stones thrown by the Palestinians injured two
policemen while three protesters were arrested.
Palestinian medics said 15 protesters were injured by rubber
bullets.
"Police remain deployed at the Temple Mount and visits
by tourists are continuing," Rosenfeld said.
The Israeli Knesset, or parliament, is due to debate in the
evening a bill introduced by MP Moshe Feiglin, a hardline member of Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party, which envisages the
"application of Israeli sovereignty" over the compound.
No vote is envisaged at the end of debate. Netanyahu is opposed
to the bill and commentators say it is unlikely to attract much support.
The Al-Aqsa compound, which lies in Jerusalem's Old City, is
a flashpoint because of its significance to both Muslims and Jews.
Sitting above the Western Wall plaza, it houses the Dome of
the Rock and the Al-Aqsa mosque and is Islam's third-holiest site.
It is also Judaism's holiest place, as it was the site of
the first and second Jewish temples.
The site is in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem but
administered by Muslim religious authorities.
Israel captured east Jerusalem from Jordan during the 1967
Six Day War and later annexed it in a move never recognised by the
international community.
Under a 1994 peace treaty, Jordan retained authority over
all Muslim sites in Jerusalem.
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