27-04-2024 01:44 AM Jerusalem Timing

UN Warns Israeli Violations of Al-Aqsa Could Ignite Mideast Violence

UN Warns Israeli Violations of Al-Aqsa Could Ignite Mideast Violence

Clashes between the Zionist occupation forces and Palestinian worshippers at the Al-Aqsa holy mosque could trigger violence elsewhere in the Middle East.

Palestine: Zionist violations in Al-AqsaClashes between the Zionist occupation forces and Palestinian worshippers at the Al-Aqsa holy mosque could trigger violence elsewhere in the Middle East, a UN envoy warned Tuesday.

UN coordinator Nickolay Mladenov delivered the warning to the Security Council on the third straight day of violence at Al-Aqsa mosque compound in occupied Jerusalem.

"As the Middle East faces a vicious tide of terror and extremism, such serious provocations have the potential to ignite violence well beyond the walls of the Old City of Jerusalem," Mladenov said.

The site of the mosque is the third-holiest in Islam but also venerated by Jews as the Temple Mount.

The envoy called for restraint and said it was "imperative that the historic status quo is preserved," allowing access to Jews to visit, but not pray, at the site.

The Palestinian envoy to the United Nations, Riyad Mansour, described the situation as "extremely dangerous" and accused "extremists on the Israeli side" of seeking to "impose a Jewish presence" at the site.

Mansour warned that such a move would lead to a religious confrontation that would have "ramifications in all corners of the Middle East and beyond."

"Religious confrontation is what ISIS is dreaming of," he told journalists, referring to the so-called 'Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant' takfiri group, which controls territory in Iraq and Syria.

The Zionist entity seized east Jerusalem, where Al-Aqsa Holy site is located, in the Six Day War of 1967 and later annexed it in a move never recognized by the international community.

The United Nations is holding a meeting of the Middle East Quartet seeking a diplomatic solution to the conflict on September 30, on the sidelines of the General Assembly session.

The foreign ministers of Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, along with the secretary general of the Arab League, will attend in a bid to broaden the search for a way back to the negotiating table between the Palestinian state and the occupation authorities.