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7 maltatoday | SUNDAY • 23 MAY 2021 OPINION ACCORDING to a report in The New York Times, Israel and Hamas will most likely reach a ceasefire agreement by the end of this week. This would imply an end to all Israeli attacks on Hamas infrastructure and facil- ities, as well as a halt of rocket fire from Hamas at Israeli cities. Israel is also demanding that Ha- mas stop digging attack tunnels toward Israel and halt violent demonstrations on the Gaza-Is- raeli border. Officially, Israel has denied the existence of such negotiations. Since May 10, fighting has left more than 200 people dead – most of them Palestinians killed by Israeli airstrikes in the Gaza Strip. How did the Israeli-Palestinian conflict re-ignite? 27 days before the first rocket was fired from Gaza, a squad of Israeli police officers entered the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem, brushed the Palestinian attend- ants aside and cut the cables of the loudspeakers that broadcast daily prayers to the faithful from four medieval minarets. It was the night of April 13, the first day of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. It was also Memorial Day in Israel, which honours those who died fight- ing for the country. The Israe- li president was delivering a speech at the Western Wall, a sacred Jewish site that lies below the mosque, and Israeli officials were concerned that the Mos- lem prayers would drown him out. In hindsight, the police raid on the mosque, one of the holiest sites in Islam, was one of several events that led to the sudden re- sumption of war between Israel and Hamas, and the outbreak of civil unrest between Arabs and Jews across Israel itself. The deterioration was fast and led to the worst violence be- tween Israelis and Palestinians in years and spawned unrest in cities across the occupied West Bank, and led to the firing of rockets towards Israel from a Palestinian refugee camp in Leb- anon, prompted Jordanians to march towards Israel in protest, and Lebanese protesters to brief- ly cross their southern border with Israel. The loudspeaker incident was followed almost immediately by an Israeli decision to close off – purportedly as a security meas- ure – a popular square outside the Damascus Gate, one of the main entrances to the Old City of Jerusalem where young Pales- tinians typically gather there at night during Ramadan. To Pal- estinians, it was another insult. Many Arabs feel they are grad- ually being pushed out of Jeru- salem – irrespective of whether they are Israeli citizens or not. Restrictions on building per- mits force them to either leave the city or build illegal housing, which is vulnerable to demoli- tion orders. So the decision to block Pales- tinians from a treasured com- munal space compounded the sense of discrimination that many have felt all their lives. The clashes at the Damascus Gate had repercussions. Pales- tinian youths began attacking Jews. And that soon led to or- ganized Jewish reprisals. On April 21, just a week after the police raid, a few hundred members of an extreme-right Jewish group, Lehava, marched through central Jerusalem, chanting "Death to Arabs" and attacking Palestinian passers-by. On April 25, the Israeli govern- ment relented on allowing Pal- estinians to gather outside the Damascus Gate. But there were other develop- ments that significantly wors- ened the situation. First was the possible eviction of six families from Sheikh Jar- rah, a Palestinian neighbour- hood in East Jerusalem. With a final court decision on their case due in the first half of May, regular protests were held throughout April: the Palestini- ans sensed that the issue was all about pushing the Arabs out of Jerusalem And it highlighted a piece of legal discrimination: Israeli law allows Jews to reclaim land in East Jerusalem that was owned by Jews before 1948. But the de- scendants of thousands of Pal- estinians who fled their homes that year have no legal means to reclaim their families' land. On April 29, President Mahmoud Abbas – leader of the Fatah party – cancelled the Palestinian elections, fearing a humiliating result. The decision made Mr Abbas look weak and Hamas began to reposition itself as a militant defender of Jeru- salem and elsewhere: that they could 'do something' while Fa- tah could not! Then the most dramatic esca- lation of all occurred: another police raid on the Aqsa Mosque on Friday, May 7. Whose hand was behind this decision? Po- lice officers armed with tear gas, stun grenades and rub- ber-tipped bullets burst into the mosque compound shortly after 8pm, setting off hours of clashes with stone-throwing protesters in which hundreds were injured. The police said the stone-throw- ers started it; several worshipers said the opposite. Whoever struck first, the pres- ence of stun grenades and bul- lets inside the prayer hall of one of the holiest sites in Islam on the last Friday of Ramadan – one of its holiest nights – was seen as a grievous insult to all Moslems and an attempt to stop them from going to Al Aqsa. That set the stage for a show- down on Monday, May 10. A final court hearing on Sheikh Jarrah was set to coincide with Jerusalem Day, when Jews cel- ebrate the reunification of Je- rusalem, following the capture of East Jerusalem, in 1967. Jew- ish nationalists typically mark the day by marching through the Muslim Quarter of the Old City and trying to visit Temple Mount, the site on which the Al Aqsa Mosque is built. The looming combination of that march, tensions over Al Aqsa and the possibility of an eviction order in Sheikh Jarrah, seemed to be very dangerous. The Supreme Court hearing in the eviction case was postponed. An order barred Jews from en- tering the mosque compound. At the last minute, the gov- ernment rerouted the Jerusalem Day march away from the Mus- lim Quarter. But that was too lit- tle, and far too late. By then, the Israeli Army had already begun to order civilians away from the Gaza perimeter. Shortly after 6 pm, two weeks ago on Monday, the rocket fire from Gaza began. The more important issue is whether the original incident when a squad of Israeli police of- ficers entered the Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem was just a coinci- dence or – as many suspect – an incident engineered by Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu. The same goes for the sec- ond time the police entered the Mosque. Following the elections, at the moment Netanyahu is in a polit- ical tight-spot as he cannot form a government and his political adversaries are eager to destroy his political career. Was the new conflict with the Palestinians 'a made-up' exac- erbation of the disagreement between Hamas – who do not even recognise the right of Israel to exist? Was all this, therefore, a Ne- tanyahu ruse to get out of the political cul-de-sac he has found himself in? Was it all a Netanyahu ruse? Michael Falzon micfal45@gmail.com Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu