25-04-2024 07:49 AM Jerusalem Timing

Jordan MPs Want Peace Treaty Be Scrapped over Zionist Actions in Al-Quds

Jordan MPs Want Peace Treaty Be Scrapped over Zionist Actions in Al-Quds

Jordanian MPs called for a 1994 ‘peace treaty’ with the Zionist entity to be scrapped after the Zionist parliament debated Israeli sovereignty over Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa mosque compound,

Jordanian MPs called for a 1994 ‘peace treaty’ with the Zionist entity to be scrapped after the Zionist parliament debated Israeli sovereignty over Jerusalem's Al-Aqsa mosque compound, a daily reported Wednesday.Al-Aqsa clashes
  
The government-owned Al-Rai newspaper said 47 out of 150 members of the lower house signed a motion late Tuesday that the treaty be annulled. "The motion came in response to Israel's actions in Al-Quds and to the Knesset debate of a law that seeks to impose Israel's sovereignty over Al-Aqsa," Al-Rai quoted MPs as saying in the motion.
  
Under the peace treaty, Jordan is the custodian of Muslim holy sites in Jerusalem. "Israel's actions clearly violate the peace treaty... it is aggression against Jordanian custodianship," the motion said. Al-Rai said the lower house will discuss "the repercussions of the debate later Wednesday".
  
On Tuesday evening, the Knesset held the first part of a debate called by rightwingers demanding that Israel end its practice of forbidding Jewish prayer at the compound.
  
In a motion which was not put to a vote, MP Moshe Feiglin, a hardline member of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party, said “Israel's fear of igniting Muslim rage amounted to discrimination against Jews.”
  
The Jordanian government has so far not commented.
  
But Jordan's opposition Islamic Action Front (IAF), the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood, urged the government on Tuesday to freeze the peace deal. "The custodianship is a Jordanian national interest and a sacred religious duty," said the IAF, the main opposition party.
  
Zionist police on Tuesday entered the compound to disperse Palestinian protesters, with an Israeli police spokesman speaking of "high tension".