Under heavy police surveillance, more than a thousand Israelis displaying national flags marched on Tuesday, June 15, at the call of the extreme right in East Jerusalem, the first test for the new government after threats from the Palestinian movement Hamas which raise fears of an escalation.

Protesters, including ultra-nationalist and far-right Jewish youth and activists, set out from an Orthodox neighborhood in West Jerusalem to pass through East Jerusalem and to the square in front of the Damascus Gate, overlooking the Muslim Quarter. of the Old City where the Mosques Esplanade is located, according to AFP journalists on the spot.

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"The eternal people do not fear a long road", sang the demonstrators, armed with blue and white flags in this flagship place of the Palestinians of East Jerusalem, Palestinian sector of the city occupied by Israel since 1967. Cries "Death to the Arabs (Palestinians, Editor's note) "broke through the crowd. 

Shortly before this controversial "flag march", the police closed arteries leading to the Old City and blocked the access of Palestinians to the plaza in front of the Damascus Gate, which resulted in clashes involving around ten. wounded among Palestinian demonstrators, according to rescuers. 

Arab Israeli deputies who came to the scene denounced the Israeli march as a "provocation".

“The only legitimate flag here in Bab al-Amoud (Damascus Gate) and East Jerusalem is the Palestinian flag. The Israeli flag here is a symbol of the occupation,” MP Ahmed Tibi said. 

Celebrate the "reunification" of the Holy City

Fearing a slippage, UN envoy for the Middle East, Tor Wennesland, called on "all parties to avoid provocations which could lead to another round of confrontation."

The march commemorates "Yom Yerushalaim" or "Jerusalem Day", the anniversary for Israelis of the "reunification" of the Holy City after its occupation in 1967 according to the Hebrew calendar.

According to international law, Israel illegally occupies East Jerusalem, also annexed.

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The march was originally scheduled to be held on May 10 following protests against in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood in East Jerusalem, where Palestinian families are threatened with eviction in favor of Jewish settlers, and clashes between Palestinians and Israeli police over the Esplanade des Mosques, the third holiest site in Islam.

But it had been canceled and Hamas launched rockets that day at Israel in solidarity with the Palestinians in East Jerusalem.

The gunfire, and the forceful response of the Israeli army, sparked an 11-day war between ruling Hamas in Gaza and Israel. 

 Incendiary balloons launched at southern Israel

After the war, and at a time when Egypt and the UN are stepping up negotiations to try to consolidate a fragile ceasefire, the organizers decided last week to put the march back on the calendar.

Hamas then threatened Israel with retaliation if the march neared the Muslim Quarter in the Old City. 

On Monday, the new Minister of Homeland Security, Omer Bar-Lev, decided to keep the protest going despite calls to cancel it from Israeli Arab MPs and Palestinian leaders.

Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh warned of the "dangerous repercussions" of this march.

"The right to demonstrate is a right for everyone in a democracy," the services of the Israeli minister said in a statement.

"The police are ready and we will do everything in our power to preserve the delicate fabric of coexistence."

In office Monday, the new motley coalition, led by Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and his partner the centrist Yaïr Lapid, ended 12 years of reign of Benjamin Netanyahu.

Walking is his first test.

In response, Palestinian factions, including Hamas, have called for a "day of anger" in the Palestinian territories to "defend" Jerusalem.

From the Israeli blockaded Palestinian enclave of Gaza, incendiary balloons were launched towards southern Israel, witnesses said.

The Israeli fire department reported about 20 fires linked to these projectiles.

Hamas spokesman Mohammad Hamadeh says "mediators" working for a lasting ceasefire with Israel called on Palestinian factions "not to engage in military escalation on the basis of flag march ".

"But all options are on the table."

With AFP

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