Jordan's parliament has recommended expelling the Israeli ambassador from Amman and freezing the peace agreement. Jordanian lawmakers plan to carry out a vigil Friday, while renewed incursions into Al-Aqsa Mosque on Monday guarded the Israeli occupation forces.

The Jordanian House of Representatives held an emergency meeting to discuss Israeli violations against Al-Aqsa Mosque, at the invitation of Speaker Atef Tarawneh, and attended by foreign ministers, media, political and parliamentary affairs.

Tarawneh opened the meeting with a speech in which he called on the government to send a message to the world that "the occupying state continues to be one of the reasons for the instability of the region, as a result of its actions that amount only to criminalization and accountability."

The cabinet adopted several recommendations to the government, including expelling the Israeli ambassador from Amman, withdrawing the Jordanian ambassador from Tel Aviv, halting all normalization with Israel, and freezing the Jordanian-Israeli peace agreement signed in Wadi Araba in 1994.

For his part, the head of the Palestine Committee in the Jordanian parliament Yahya al-Saud said that a number of deputies will carry out a pause at the King Hussein crossing with the occupied Palestinian territories on Friday, "to convey a message to the Israeli occupation that the Al-Aqsa Mosque, Jerusalem and Palestine is a red line for Jordanians must not be crossed."

The Jordanian Foreign Ministry announced on Sunday that it had summoned Israel's ambassador to the kingdom, Prince Weissbord, to affirm "the Kingdom's condemnation and rejection of Israeli violations in Al-Aqsa Mosque."

On the other hand, said the information official in the Department of Islamic Endowments in Jerusalem Firas al-Dibs that "114 extremists stormed the Al-Aqsa Mosque on Monday, guarded by Israeli police."

On Tuesday, Israeli Internal Security Minister Gilad Ardan called for changing the status of the Al-Aqsa Mosque so that Jews could pray there.