Jordan says Israel’s Al-Aqsa mosque restrictions risk ‘explosion’

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

The compound, the third-holiest shrine in Islam, is also the site of the most sacred place for Jews, who know it as Temple Mount.

The compound, the third-holiest shrine in Islam, is also the site of the most sacred place for Jews, who know it as Temple Mount.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Follow topic:

- Jordan’s Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi on March 11 said restrictions imposed by Israel on Muslim worshippers’ access to the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in Jerusalem during the Muslim fasting month risked pushing the situation towards an “explosion”.

Speaking to state media, Mr Safadi said his country, which oversees the holy site, rejected Israel’s announced move to limit access during Ramadan by

citing security needs with war raging in Gaza.

In a joint news conference with Vatican Foreign Minister Paul Gallagher, Mr Safadi said: “We warn that desecrating the sanctity of Al-Aqsa Mosque is playing with fire.”

The compound, the third-holiest shrine in Islam, is also the site of the most sacred place for Jews, who know it as Temple Mount. It has been a longstanding flashpoint for trouble.

Jordan echoes the Palestinian view that such restrictions on Muslim worshippers, already facing war and hunger in Gaza, were an attack on freedom of worship.

After hard-right Israeli Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir said recently he wanted tougher restrictions, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the numbers admitted would be similar to 2023.

Mr Safadi said: “Not allowing worshippers to perform their religious duties and rituals in this holy month, and restricting freedom to enter the Aqsa mosque – all that pushes towards an explosive situation, which is what we are warning about.”

Israel was also risking wider violence in the Israeli occupied West Bank by what Mr Safadi called unilateral Israeli measures to change the status quo, citing accelerated Jewish settlement building on Arab land and what he termed stepped up “terror attacks by armed settlers on Palestinian villagers”.

“The West Bank is boiling,” Mr Safadi added.

The Israeli-occupied West Bank has, since the Gaza war, seen a surge of confrontations, with around 400 Palestinians killed in clashes with security forces or Jewish settlers.

Most world powers view as illegal the settlements Israel has built on land it captured in a 1967 war with Arab powers.

The holy month of Ramadan comes at a time when Palestinians in the enclave were dying of hunger, with Israel using food as a weapon of war, Mr Safadi said.

“Ramadan comes with Gaza bombed by Israel, and women unable to find food for their children. And five months that have passed with the world failing to preserve human dignity,” he added.

Israel’s relentless campaign in Gaza has caused increasing alarm across the world as the growing risk of famine threatens to add to a death toll that has already passed 31,000.

Israel denies it is responsible for the wider hunger or waging war on civilians. REUTERS

See more on