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Latest update: 17/03/2010
- diplomacy - George Mitchell - Israeli-Palestinian conflict
Riots rock East Jerusalem as peace talks falter
Hundreds of Palestinians clashed with security forces across East Jerusalem after Israel announced plans to build 1,600 new homes for Jewish settlers there. The move also angered the US, prompting envoy George Mitchell to delay a visit to the region.
AFP - Israel counted the cost Wednesday after hundreds of Palestinians clashed with security forces across east Jerusalem, amid the worst diplomatic spat in decades between Israel and its key US ally.
As the worst rioting in years rocked Jerusalem Tuesday, and a senior Hamas leader called for a new "intifada" or uprising, US Middle East envoy George Mitchell delayed a visit to the region despite efforts to revive peace talks.
Israeli police fired rubber bullets, stun grenades and tear gas at Palestinian protesters who hurled stones and set up barricades of dumpsters and burning tyres in several neighbourhoods.
Twenty-one injured Palestinians were hospitalised and dozens more were treated on the spot, the Palestinian Red Crescent Society said.
One policeman suffered a pistol shot to the hand in an Arab neighbourhood of east Jerusalem, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said, adding that the unknown gunman got away.
Four other policeman were briefly taken to hospital and another 10 treated on site after being hit by rocks.
Sixty Palestinians were arrested.
Also Tuesday, stones were thrown at a bus in the largely Arab neighbourhood of Jaffa, south of Tel Aviv, said Rosenfeld, the first reports of unrest in other Israeli cities. The bus was damaged, but there were no injuries.
The clashes erupted across east Jerusalem, which Israel captured in the 1967 Six-Day War and later annexed in a move not recognised by the international community.
As the rioting flared, Hamas deputy politburo chief Mussa Abu Marzuk called for another popular Palestinian uprising.
"The intifada must enjoy the participation of all of Palestinian society," he told Al-Jazeera television. "Every Palestinian should rise up... against the forces of the (Israeli) occupation."
In the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip thousands of people took to the streets, chanting: "With our blood, with our souls, we sacrifice for you, Jerusalem."
The Palestinians have launched two intifadas against Israeli rule in the occupied territories, the first in 1987 and the second in 2000, but Hamas's calls for a new uprising in recent years have been largely ignored.
Israeli police chief Dudi Cohen told reporters he did not see signs of a new uprising: "We are seeing signs of disorderly conduct, but that's all."
Palestinians were already seething over Israeli plans to build 1,600 new homes for Jewish settlers in east Jerusalem.
Last week's announcement of the project also incensed Washington, and Mitchell postponed a visit to the region that was to start on Tuesday. That trip will not take place before the Middle East Quartet meets in Moscow on Thursday.
Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat said he would not travel to Moscow because of the tension in Jerusalem.
But even as Mitchell stayed away, the mutual anger appeared to ease slightly with warmer words being uttered on both sides.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Washington remained committed to reviving peace talks, telling reporters there was "too much at stake" for Palestinians and Israelis to abandon them.
US officials said Clinton would talk soon with Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in an effort to ease the bitter diplomatic feud, maybe as early as Wednesday.
In a possible sign it wants to stop the row widening, the administration termed the dispute a disagreement between friends that would not shatter the "unbreakable bond" between the allies.
Netanyahu responded in a statement: "The State of Israel appreciates and cherishes the warm words from Secretary of State Clinton on the deep ties between the US and Israel and the US commitment to Israel's security."
UN chief Ban Ki-moon called for restraint from both Israel and the Palestinians, and reiterated that Jerusalem's final status should be decided by negotiations.
Earlier this month, the Palestinians reluctantly agreed to indirect talks with Israel after a 14-month break, but the outlook for a swift resumption of the peace process now looks bleak after the new settlements announcement.
The reopening of the twice-destroyed Hurva synagogue in the Jewish quarter of Jerusalem's walled Old City on Monday further fuelled tensions.
Many Palestinians view Israeli projects near the flashpoint Al-Aqsa mosque compound -- Islam's third holiest site -- as an assault on its tense status quo or a prelude to the building of a third Jewish temple there.
Jews call the compound Temple Mount and consider it their holiest site because the second Temple stood there before the Romans destroyed it in 70 AD.
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Comments (2)
US Angered
The problem with the statement "The move also angered the US, prompting envoy George Mitchell to delay a visit to the region." is that it is a false statement. The move angered the want-to-be dictator Obama and his left wing cronies, not the American People. The American People want him to obey the Constitution not dictate what "he wants" this nation to be, an islamic friend and an enemy of Israel.
Illegal building in East Jerusalem
The US government should correctly focus on representing its electorate and not a lobby group for a foreign power, regardless of the threats of AIPAC supporters.
Jerusalem is an 'international city' by resolution of the United Nations and East Jerusalem is designated be the capital of a future Palestinian state. Israel has no legal right to build in that sector, as well they know.
Binyamin's stratagem to construct 'facts on the ground' in order frustrate the wish of the UN, is arrogant and misconceived.
Likud cannot treat the UN and the international community with such continued contempt.
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