Israel removing metal detectors from shrine in bid to end standoffs

epa06108353 Palestinians pray at the Lion's Gate in the Old City of Jerusalem near the entrance to the Haram el-Sherif (Noble Sanctuary), or The Temple Mount to Jews, at the Old City of Jerusalem, 25 July 2017. During the night police removed the controversial metal detectors that were placed in the wake of a shooting of two Israeli police officers at this popular entrance to the Al-Aqsa Mosque, amid a diplomatic easing of recent tensions. The mufti of Jerusalem called on Muslims not to enter and  pray at the  Al-Aqsa Mosque, even though Israel had been dismantled metal detectors  EPA/ABIR SULTAN

Bloomberg

Israel began removing metal detectors from a contested Jerusalem shrine in a bid to quell violent Palestinian opposition, in a deal that also helped to end a diplomatic standoff with Jordan.
The decision was part of a broader deal that allowed Israeli diplomats and embassy personnel in Jordan to return home late Monday following a deadly shooting at the diplomatic compound in Amman, resolving a standoff between the two American allies. Shortly after the release, Israel accepted Palestinian demands to take down the detectors, and said it would replace them with unspecified security equipment “based on advanced technologies.”
It wasn’t clear whether the deal—which was coordinated with White House aides Jared Kushner and Jason Greenblatt, who was dispatched to the region on an emergency mission—would be enough to ease tensions with the Palestinians, who saw the devices as an assertion of Israeli sovereignty over the hilltop, to which they also lay claim.
The site is home to the Al-Aqsa mosque compound, Islam’s third-holiest shrine, and is Judaism’s holiest place.
Fatah, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ political party, said it rejects any changes made to the compound including replacing the detectors with surveillance cameras, which were also installed at the shrine along with the detectors after two Israeli policemen were shot dead there this month. Mahmoud al-Aloul, vice-president of the Fatah movement, said a meeting would be held on Wednesday to discuss Israel’s “intention to install surveillance cameras on the gates of Al-Aqsa Mosque.” There was no comment from Abbas’s Palestinian Authority.
The Muslim trust known as the Waqf that administers the compound on Jordan’s behalf said it wants the situation on the mount restored to its previous state. The decision to remove the contentious devices, whose installation touched off an outbreak of unrest that claimed the lives of five Palestinians and three Israelis, was announced after Jordan released the Israeli embassy personnel.
The returning staffers included a security guard who shot dead a workman who stabbed him from behind with a screwdriver, plus another Jordanian bystander, according to Israel’s account. Jordan had initially insisted on interrogating him, but Israel resisted, saying he was immune from questioning or detention under an international agreement governing diplomatic relations.
The shooting had complicated efforts to end the violence at the Jerusalem shrine, where Muslim faithful believe the Prophet Muhammad ascended to heaven and which Jews revere as the site of their biblical temple.

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