October 21, 2015

​UN chief meets Abbas; calls for an end to violence

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Wednesday 21 Oct 2015 - 20:57 Makkah mean time-8-1-1437

Ramallah (IINA) - United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has urged an end to spiraling violence as he met Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Ramallah, saying all recent killings must be thoroughly investigated, according to media reports.
Ban’s visit on Wednesday was aimed at calming three weeks of deadly unrest in which 51 Palestinians and eight Israelis were killed across Israel and the Palestinian territories. On Wednesday afternoon, a Palestinian man was fatally shot during the latest alleged stabbing incident. A female soldier was reportedly injured. “We will continue to support all efforts to create the conditions to make meaningful negotiations possible,” Ban told journalists after meeting Abbas in the West Bank city of Ramallah earlier in the day. "But ultimately it is for Palestinians and Israelis to choose peace. Our most urgent challenge is to stop the current wave of violence and avoid any further loss of life."
Ban, who met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday, said that "the only way to end the violence is through real and visible progress toward a political solution, including an end of the occupation". "I have stressed to both Israeli and Palestinian leaders the urgent need to reaffirm through words and deeds that they are partners for peace," he said.
Abbas called on Israel to strictly respect rules governing East Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, known to Jews as the Temple Mount. Clashes between Israeli forces and Palestinian protesters at the compound in September preceded the current wave of violence. Netanyahu has repeatedly accused Abbas of inciting violence by suggesting that Israel wants to change the status of the compound, while Israeli authorities have allowed an increasing amount of Israeli visits to the site. 
Muslims fear Israel will seek to change rules governing the site. Jews are allowed to visit but not pray to avoid provoking tensions. "The continued occupation and aggression against Christian and Muslim holy sites in East Jerusalem, particularly against Al-Aqsa, opens the door to a religious conflict, which has unfortunately started," Abbas told journalists. "We don't want it and we are warning over its consequences," he said. Since the beginning of October, 50 Palestinians have been killed in shootings and clashes with Israeli forces in the occupied Palestinian territories and Israel, while eight Israelis have been killed in knife and gun attacks.
One Eritrean asylum seeker was killed after he was mistaken for a Palestinian attacker during a raid in southern Israel. On Tuesday, an Israeli settler was run over by a vehicle near Hebron, in what the Palestinian driver said was an accident. Rights groups have warned that Israel is using excessive force against Palestinians and that some of the incidents amounted to extrajudicial killings. The violence has been triggered in part by recent visits by Jewish groups to the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in occupied East Jerusalem, coupled with Israeli restrictions on Palestinian access to the mosque, one of Islam's holiest sites.
HA/IINA

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