JERUSALEM
(Reuters) - Israeli police tightened security around Jerusalem's Old
City on Friday as Muslims protested
against its installation of metal
detectors at a flashpoint shrine holy to both Jews and Muslims.
There
have been daily confrontations between Palestinians hurling rocks and
Israeli police using stun grenades since the detectors were placed at
the entrance to the shrine on Sunday, after the killing of two Israeli
policemen.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's security cabinet decided on Thursday night to keep the detectors in place.
In
protest, hundreds of worshippers gathered at various entrances to the
compound, known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and to Jews as Temple
Mount, before Friday prayers, but refused to enter, preferring to pray
outside.
"We reject Israeli restrictions at the Aqsa Mosque," said Jerusalem's senior Muslim cleric, Grand Mufti Mohammad Hussein.
Muslim
leaders and Palestinian political factions had urged the faithful to
gather for a "day of rage" on Friday against the new security policies,
which they see as changing delicate agreements that have governed the
holy site for decades.
But by early afternoon,
with police mobilizing extra units and placing barriers to carry out
checks at entrances to the Old City, there had been little violence.
Access
to the shrine for Muslims was limited to men over 50 as well as women
of all ages. Roadblocks were in place on approach roads to Jerusalem to
stop buses carrying Muslims to the site.
At one location near the Old City, stone throwers did try to break through a police line, and police used stun grenades.
The
Palestinian Red Crescent ambulance service said at least 30 people had
been hurt, two seriously and some suffered from tear gas inhalation.
Ahmad
Abdul Salaam, a local businessman who came to pray outside the Noble
Sanctuary said: "Putting these metal detectors at the entrance to our
place of worship is like putting them at the entrance to our house. Are
you really going to put me through a metal detector as I go into my
house?"
The hill-top compound, which contains
the Dome of the Rock and al-Aqsa Mosque, has long been a source of
religious friction. Since Israel captured and annexed the Old City,
including the compound, in the 1967 Middle East war, it has also become a
symbol of Palestinian nationalism.
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