Jewish extremism spikes amid Al-Aqsa clashes

Israeli law enforcement may be fast when responding to unrest among Palestinians, but things are different for Israeli extremists

Jewish extremism spikes amid Al-Aqsa clashes

World Bulletin / News Desk

A wave of violence centered around the Al-Aqsa mosque, which was attacked by extremist Jews, has reached the West Bank. Palestinian demonstrators clashed with Israeli police, while rotesters hurled stones at security forces, who used rubber bullets against them, Russia Today reported Wednesday.

Israeli security forces used tear gas, stun grenades and fired rubber and low-calibre bullets at the legs of protesters, at least six of whom suffered leg injuries.

The Al-Aqsa mosque has been shaken by violence over the last fortnight. Only in recent days have police been using stun grenades and rubber bullets against Palestinians in the compound.

Tensions have been running high, as a controversial rule linked with the mosque stipulates that Jews and people of other religions can enter Al-Aqsa between 7:30am and 11:30am local time, but they may not pray there.

However, Palestinians said that far-right Jews who entered the mosque started to pray, breaching the 50-year-old agreement and triggering tensions.

As RT was to discover, Israeli law enforcement may be fast when responding to unrest among Palestinians, but things are different for Israeli extremists.

At the beginning of August, both Israeli and Palestinian communities were horrified by an arson attack in the West Bank that burned alive 18-month-old Ali Dawabsheh, with his parents having died from their wounds days later.

It wasn't the only heart-stopping case of Jewish extremist violence: In mid-August, Jewish extremists set fire to a Bedouin tent, but fortunately, no-one was inside; in June, an ultra-Orthodox man stabbed and killed a 16-year-old Jewish girl at a gay pride parade.

In June, there was an arson in a legendary Church on the Sea of Galilee.

Experts say that Jewish extremists could have orchestrated the arson that took three innocent lives, as well as other violence, but the government is not in a hurry to prosecute.

"That's why those terrorists feel free to act or to talk violence and to behave in a violent way. They feel free because no-one arrested them in the past," Ahmed Tibi, Arab member of the Israeli parliament, said.

They have also theorized as to why perpetrators remain unpunished.

"When you talk about Jewish extremism, you're not talking about a group isolated from other groups in the Jewish society that are less violent, who are on the margin … some of these people are part of legitimate circles, such as religious community leaders," theology professor Menachem Friedman said.

One of the most vivid examples is Ben Zion Gopstein, chief of a far-right Jewish organization that is not outlawed in Israel. He has openly called for the torching of churches, but has been set free after brief questioning.

"This is the Bible, I am not ashamed that I like my people and my land, and whoever thinks that this is not my land, and that's his land, has no business here. I’m fighting that. If that's considered extreme, then I'm extreme," he said.

At the same time, punishments are getting harsher for Palestinians by the day.

"There are more than 350 Palestinians who are arrested by administrative detention. Only three Israeli settlers were detained last month… Palestinians are brought to military court in the West Bank, Jewish settlers are not. They are being subjected to civil courts inside Israel, which is easier," Ahmed Tibi, Arab member of the Israeli parliament, said.

On the face of it, things look prettier, with premier Benjamin Netanyahu saying that he has "zero tolerance" for Jewish extremists, and the cabinet has approved new measures against Israelis who attack Palestinians.

However, the four-year-old Ahmad Dawabsheh should perhaps first get his answers about who was behind the arson that left him an orphan, with his brother also dead.

Source: RT

Güncelleme Tarihi: 30 Eylül 2015, 10:51
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