AMMAN: Jordan condemned a visit by far-right Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir to the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound on Monday during celebrations marking Israel’s capture of East Jerusalem in 1967.
“The practices of this extremist minister and his continued incursions into the blessed Al-Aqsa Mosque ... do not negate the fact that East Jerusalem is an occupied city over which Israel has no sovereignty,” said a statement from the Foreign Ministry of Jordan, the custodian of the site.
Ben Gvir has long pushed for Jewish prayer rights at the flashpoint site.
Most countries consider East Jerusalem to be occupied territory and do not recognize Israeli sovereignty over it.
The annual “Flag March” on Monday drew thousands chanting, dancing and waving Israeli flags shortly after Ben Gvir visited the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound.
Witnesses said a large rally in Jerusalem descended into chaos as far-right Israeli Jews confronted and assaulted Palestinians, fellow Israelis and journalists.
A spokesperson for the Palestinian presidency based in the West Bank condemned the march and Ben Gvir’s visit to Al-Aqsa.
Israel’s ongoing war in Gaza, “repeated incursions into the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound and provocative acts such as raising the Israeli flag in occupied Jerusalem threaten the stability of the entire region,” Nabil Abu Rudeineh said in a statement.
Violence broke out in the walled Old City of East Jerusalem shortly after midday, witnesses said, when young marchers began harassing the few Palestinian shopkeepers who had yet to shutter their stores ahead of the rally.
The marchers, mostly young Israelis who live in settlements in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, then began to target Israeli left-wing activists and journalists observing the rally.
The demonstrators shouted nationalistic slogans and called for violence against Palestinians.
A Palestinian woman and journalists were spat on by a group of young settlers, and nearby Israeli police did not intervene, a Reuters witness said.
No arrests were reported as of late afternoon.
A police officer at the scene said young Israeli marchers could not be arrested because they were under the age of 18.
Moshe, a 35-year-old Israeli settler from the West Bank and supporter of the current right-wing government, walked through a Palestinian neighborhood of the Old City with a rifle slung over his shoulder and his daughter on his shoulders.
It was a “very happy day” because all of Jerusalem was “under the government of Israel,” he said, declining to give his last name.
Left-wing opposition leader Yair Golan, a former armed forces deputy commander, described images of violence in the Old City as “shocking.”
He said in a statement: “This is not what loving Jerusalem looks like. This is what hatred, racism, and bullying look like.”
“We will keep Jerusalem united, whole, and under Israeli sovereignty,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told a Cabinet meeting held in East Jerusalem earlier on Monday.
Clashes flared throughout the day as left-wing Israeli activists intervened to escort Palestinians away from young far-right Israeli Jews threatening passersby, witnesses said.
Journalists covering the rally were repeatedly harassed and, in some instances, assaulted, the Reuters witness said.