Know More About Palestine



Monday Feb. 22, 2010 7:42 AM (EST+7)
Israel to include W. Bank shrines in heritage plan


Read more: Ibrahimi mosque, Tomb of the Patriarchs, Rachel‘s Tomb, Hebron, Bethlehem, religion

JERUSALEM, Feb 21 (Reuters & JMCC) - Israel said on Sunday it wanted to include two shrines in the occupied West Bank in a national plan to rehabilitate some 150 Jewish and Zionist heritage sites, drawing condemnation from the Palestinians.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was quoted in a statement as saying that Rachel's Tomb, on the outskirts of Bethlehem, and Hebron's Tomb of the Patriarchs, a site Muslims call the Ibrahimi Mosque, would be part of the plan.

Since I was asked, I would like to make my intentions clear, and this is what will be, Netanyahu said during a special cabinet meeting held in Tel Hai, a historical site in northern Israel where Jews and Arabs fought battles in 1920.

Israeli media reported that the two disputed sites had been included in the plan only after pressure from nationalist ministers in Netanyahu's right-leaning coalition government.

The Fateh party of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said in a statement that the decision was an attempt by Netanyahu's government to wreck international efforts aimed at returning to (peace) talks, which were suspended over a year ago.

Rachel's Tomb which is revered by Jews as the gravesite of the matriarch Rachel, is guarded by Israeli soldiers and surrounded by a fence. Palestinians once visited the shrine as a maqam, a site for honoring a local saint.

Israeli security is also tight at the Hebron holy site, where a Jewish settler shot and killed 29 Muslim worshippers in 1994 before being beaten to death at the scene. Since the incident, the former mosque believed to hold the tombs of the prophet Abraham and his family members - holy in Judaism, Islam and Christianity - has been divided to hold a mosque and synagogue.

Some 400 Jewish settlers live in heavily guarded enclaves in the city, which is also home to some 150,000 Palestinians.

This particular violation is especially dangerous because it will add to the religious component of the conflict in a way that might bring dangerous consequences, said Ghassan Khatib, a spokesman for the Palestinian government in Ramallah.

Also on Sunday, some 50 Jewish settlers and Israeli right-wing activists entered the Palestinian city of Jericho and barricaded themselves inside an ancient synagogue. An Israeli army spokesman said soldiers had evacuated the settlers.

It was unclear whether the Jericho synagogue was part of Netanyahu's restoration plan, which he said would cost some 400 million shekels ($107 million).

Netanyahu, who last year ordered a limited 10-month freeze on settlement construction in the West Bank, says he is ready to resume peace talks immediately and without preconditions.

Abbas says peace talks cannot resume without a full settlement freeze that includes East Jerusalem. (Reporting by Joseph Nasr, Tom Perry and Mustafa Abu Ganeyeh, Writing by Joseph Nasr; Editing by Jon Boyle)
WHAT'S NEW


BACKGROUND


POLLS


WAYS TO GET JMCC


CONTACT US


Subscribe

Al-Madaris St. (same building as
MBC and al-Arabiya studios)
First Floor, Al-Bireh
PO Box 4045, Ramallah
PO Box 25047, Jerusalem 97300
Phone: ++972-2-297-6555
Fax: ++972-2-297-6555
Log in to My JMCC
Email
Password
 or Sign Up
Forgot your password?Close
 My JMCC
Front Page
My Comments Photo of the Day
Calendar Hot Spot(for journalists)
Audio of the Day Video of the Day
Most Popular Historical Timeline
Noticeboard Blogs
My Tags Help Desk
  
User Info
First Name
Last Name
Email
My Tags 
I am a
After signing up,you will receive
an automatically
generated password in your
email.
Close
Recover Password
Submit Your Email
 or Sign Up
Close