Occupied Jerusalem -

After Friday prayers at Al-Aqsa Mosque, a march in support of Palestinian prisoners in occupation prisons began, and the participants raised the Palestinian flag inside the squares.

Before the occupation forces storm Al-Aqsa squares and break up the march.

It was noted that dozens of boys participated in the march that toured the courtyard of the Dome of the Rock chapel. The participants carried a picture of the wounded prisoner, Esraa Jaabis, and chanted for her and the prisoners, "Freedom, freedom, freedom for our prisoners."

Minutes after the start of the march, dozens of members of the special forces stormed the mosque and distributed them among the bowls in the courtyard of the Dome of the Rock, and a boy of no more than 16 years old was arrested.

The sermon of the Mufti of Jerusalem and the Palestinian territories, Muhammad Hussein, focused on the issue of prisoners and their rights and the importance of supporting them, saying that the occupation thought that it would weaken the resolve of the captive movement in prisons, so it resorted to brutally attacking prisoners in the Negev, Gilboa and others.

The Mufti added that the prisoners are not criminals, but rather they are honest in their faith and good deeds, and are patient for their freedom, the freedom of their homeland, the freedom of their sanctities and their sanctities.

It is noteworthy that the occupation forces prevented worshipers from entering the mosque before dawn prayers today, with the continued competition between Jerusalemite families to perform the Friday dawn prayers inside it, and despite the restrictions, 5,000 worshipers managed to enter Al-Aqsa after they shouted the takbeer in front of the doors they did not leave until they entered and arrived in its premises.

The director of the blessed Al-Aqsa Mosque, Omar Al-Kiswani, said that 40,000 worshipers performed Friday prayers in Al-Aqsa despite the restrictions on doors and roadblocks leading to it.

Israeli forces deployed in Al-Aqsa Square after the march was broken up (Al-Jazeera)

He added in his speech to Al Jazeera Net that the Friday sermon focused on the issue of prisoners, and a march was also launched in the squares to support them in response to the oppression and abuse of the occupation behind bars.

"We want to convey a message to the whole world that the occupation does not respect the minimum human rights of the prisoners, and that it singles them out after 6 of them gained their freedom a few days ago, and this repression will not discourage the prisoners, and there must be international solidarity to expedite their release," he said.

Two days ago, young men gathered spontaneously on the stands of Bab al-Amud in support of the prisoners inside the prisons, and the occupation forces rushed to suppress them and disperse them with sound bombs and beatings with batons.

The occupation forces stormed the Al-Aqsa Mosque to break up the march in which the Jerusalemites raised the Palestinian flag and a spoon to support the six liberated prisoners who escaped from Gilboa prison 5 days ago.

They raised slogans saluting the struggle of the prisoners and supporting the prisoners' movement in Israeli prisons.

On the Palestinian arena, the Hebron area, specifically the town of Beit Ummar, as well as the town of Beita, south of Nablus, witnessed confrontations between a number of citizens and the occupation forces, as several areas in the West Bank witnessed marches of support and backing for prisoners and support for the six prisoners who liberated themselves by escaping through a tunnel from a prison Gilboa, west of Beit She'an, inside the Green Line, at dawn last Monday.