IQNA

Palestinians Condemn Israeli Regime Cabinet Meeting beneath Al-Aqsa Mosque

15:14 - May 22, 2023
News ID: 3483661
TEHRAN (IQNA) – The Israeli regime held a cabinet meeting in a tunnel underneath Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem al-Quds on Sunday, a move strongly condemned by Palestinians.

Al-Aqsa Mosque

 

The move was an attempt to demonstrate the Zionist regime’s “sovereignty” over the occupied city and its holy sites.

The tunnel in question is located under Al-Buraq Wall (the Western Wall) of the Noble Sanctuary of Al-Aqsa.

According to Israeli daily Maariv, during the meeting, the regime’s cabinet approved a large budget – NIS60 million ($17m) – and a number of Judaization projects for Jerusalem al-Quds.

The budget and projects are aimed at encouraging more tunnels to be dug beneath Al-Aqsa Mosque which, inevitably, weaken the ancient structure.

"Time and again, my friends and I have been forced to repel international pressure on the part of those who would divide Jerusalem again," AFP quoted the regime’s prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu as saying. "A few days ago, Abu Mazen [Mahmoud Abbas] said that the Jewish people do not have links to Jerusalem and Al-Haram, therefore, I am telling him that we are holding our meetings today in the depth of Jerusalem and its Haram."

Palestinian groups and the Palestinian Authority condemned the occupation regime for holding the cabinet meeting underneath Al-Aqsa Mosque for the first time since 2017.

"This is a dangerous escalation of the religious war waged by the Israeli occupation against the holy city of al-Quds," said Hamas spokesman Hazem Qasem.

Ahmed Ruwaidi, the advisor to PA President Mahmoud Abbas on al-Quds Affairs, said that the Israeli regime is seeking to reinforce its sovereignty in East al-Quds and to present a false narrative at the expense of the historical reality of the region. He added that the meeting promotes projects aimed at the forcible displacement of the indigenous Palestinian population in the Jerusalem neighborhoods of Sheikh Jarrah and Silwan.

 

 

 

Source: Middle East Monitor

captcha