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Clashes rock flashpoint Jerusalem mosque

Israeli police and Palestinian protesters have clashed again in the flashpoint Al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem.

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Israeli riot police patrolling the East Jerusalem village of Issiwiya as part of increased security presence in East Jerusalem in fears of continuing violence over access to the Moslem holy sites, such as al-Aqsa and the Dome of the Rock, in Jerusalem's Old City. (EPA/JIM HOLLANDER)

Israeli police have clashed with stone-throwing Palestinians inside Jerusalem's flashpoint Al-Aqsa mosque compound after far-right Jewish groups announced plans to visit the site despite weeks of soaring tensions.

The planned visit by a Jewish group including ultra-nationalist politicians was to have taken place a week after the attempted assassination of one of its leading activists by a Palestinian gunman prompted Israel to close the site, which is holy to both Jews and Muslims.

"Dozens of masked protesters threw stones and firecrackers at security forces who then entered the Temple Mount and pushed the demonstrators inside the (Al-Aqsa) mosque," police spokeswoman Luba Samri said, using the Hebrew term for the compound.

In a rare move, police entered "several metres" inside the mosque to remove blockages set up by the protesters in order to lock them inside, she said.

The clashes erupted with protesters hurling stones and firecrackers after police opened the Mughrabi Gate to visitors.

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The gate, which lies at the southwestern corner of the plaza, is the only entrance to the compound for non-Muslims.

Police then entered the plaza and the protesters fled inside the mosque, where they had set up obstacles to prevent anyone from shutting the doors and locking them inside - a regular occurrence when clashes erupt at the site.

"In light of the serious confrontation and the escalation in actions by the rioters, in order to prevent continued harm to the police and to remove the obstacles in front of the doors and on the ground, the force entered several metres inside, and managed to close the mosque's doors with the rioters inside," the spokeswoman said on Wednesday.

The compound was then reopened to visitors, although the protesters remained locked inside the mosque, she added.

The clashes quickly spread into the alleys of the surrounding Old City.


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