by Efrat Forsher
Police order Islamic Movement leader Raed Salah's arrest for incitement, 10 days after making a speech declaring that Israeli police intended to torch Temple Mount • Court issues restraining order to keep Salah out of Jerusalem.
| 
                                            The head of the Islamic 
Movement's northern branch, Sheikh Raed Salah [Archive]                 
                                
                                                 
|Photo credit: Israel Police  | 
Hours before Israel sits down to celebrate 
Rosh Hashana, hundreds of Muslim worshippers began throwing rocks at 
police officers and Jewish visitors at Jerusalem's Temple Mount on 
Wednesday morning. A large police force was summoned to the scene to 
calm the situation, and no injuries or damage were reported.
The officers managed to subdue the rioters, 
some of whom were wearing face masks. Many fled into nearby mosques when
 the police arrived. A large police presence remained on site, and entry
 to the Temple Mount was not restricted. 
Police sources said that they were not 
surprised by the violence and that police had advance knowledge of plans
 to riot on the Temple Mount. Police Commissioner Yohanan Danino said he
 planned to closely monitor the deployment of police units in the area 
over the course of the holiday. 
The rock-throwing incident occurred one day 
after the head the northern chapter of the Islamic Movement, Sheikh Raed
 Salah, was arrested on his way to a press conference in east Jerusalem.
 Police suspect that Salah meant to incite his followers to instigate 
violent clashes on the Temple Mount during the Jewish holiday. 
The Muslim cleric was reportedly traveling to a
 press conference called "Toward the Spring of Jerusalem and Al-Aqsa" in
 the Wadi al-Joz neighborhood of east Jerusalem when police arrested 
him, a spokesman for the Islamic Movement, attorney Zaahi Nejidat, told 
Al-Jazeera. 
Police brought Salah to the Russian Compound in Jerusalem for questioning.
Salah's arrest was apparently in response to a
 speech the sheikh gave at Kafr Qara near Haifa. The outspoken cleric 
had accused Israel of being behind the recent political crisis in Egypt 
and throughout the Arab world. He also said the Jerusalem police force 
planned to torch the Temple Mount during the High Holy Days. 
That last comment may have been in response to
 a police announcement that Jews would be allowed to enter the Temple 
Mount, managed by the Islamic Waqf, over Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur.
A Jerusalem court on Tuesday filed a 
restraining order against Salah, ordering him to stay more than 30 
kilometers (19 miles) from Jerusalem. Salah refused, and was kept in 
custody overnight, but was released early Wedensday after accepting the 
terms of the order. 
Salah has been arrested before. In 2011, police arrested
 him for apparently assaulting officers near the Allenby Bridge border 
crossing between Israel and Jordan. In 2009, he was arrested for making 
inflammatory remarks and apparent incitement during clashes between 
police and Palestinian activists in Wadi al-Joz in Jerusalem. 
Efrat Forsher
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=11823
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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