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Israel closes crossing to Gazans after new rocket attacks

By - Apr 23,2022 - Last updated at Apr 23,2022

Young men ride a vehicle at the Palestinian Authority side of the Erez Crossing in Beit Hanoun in the northern Gaza Strip, on Saturday (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Israel said it will close its only crossing from the Gaza Strip for workers on Sunday in response to reported overnight rocket fire, stopping short of conducting retaliatory strikes in an apparent bid to ease tensions.

The rocket attacks on Friday night and Saturday morning followed days of confrontations at Jerusalem's flashpoint Al Aqsa Mosque Compound and a month of deadly violence.

The unrest, which comes as the Jewish festival of Passover overlaps with the holy Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, has sparked international fears of a wider conflict, one year after similar violence led to an 11-day war between Israel and Gaza-based fighters.

"Following the rockets fired towards Israeli territory from the Gaza Strip last night, it was decided that crossings into Israel for Gazan merchants and workers through the Erez Crossing will not be permitted this upcoming Sunday," said COGAT, a unit of the Israeli defence ministry responsible for Palestinian civil affairs.

Israel had retaliated against those attacks with air strikes, but in an apparent desire to prevent further violence, shifted its response this time to the painful economic measure of closing Erez, implying that further rockets would extend the penalty.

"The reopening of the crossing will be decided in accordance with a security situational assessment," COGAT added.

Employment in Israel is a lifeline for people in Gaza, where according to a recent World Bank report nearly half of the 2.3 million population is unemployed.

There are currently 12,000 Gazans with work permits in Israel, with the government recently announcing its intention to add another 8,000.

More than 200 people, mostly Palestinians, have been hurt in confrontations in and around Al-Aqsa in the past week.

Palestinians have been outraged by massive Israeli forces deployment and repeated visits by Jews to the holy site.

Early on Friday, the Palestinian Red Crescent said 57 people were wounded after Israelis stormed the compound in Israeli-occupied East Jerusalem’s Old City when Palestinians began hurling stones towards the Western Wall, the holiest site where Jews can pray.

And after midday prayers, some Muslim worshippers chanted “incitement” and tried to damage an Israeli forces post, the forces said, using a drone to spray tear gas from the air, AFP reporters said.

Saturday morning prayers, however, passed without incident, with Israeli officials estimating that 16,000 Muslims participated.

Al Aqsa is Islam’s third-holiest site, and the most sacred site in Judaism where it is known as the Temple Mount.

By long-standing convention, Jews are allowed to visit under certain conditions but are not allowed to pray there.

The escalating unrest prompted concern at the United Nations, which on Thursday demanded a probe into the Israeli police actions.

“The use of force by Israeli forces resulting in widespread injuries among worshippers and staff in and around Al Aqsa Mosque compound must be promptly, impartially, independently and transparently investigated,” said Ravina Shamdasani, spokeswoman for the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.

Israel is braced for more violence, however.

The unrest in Jerusalem stirred emotions among Israel’s Arab population, with hundreds marching in the Arab-Israeli city of Umm Al Fahm in support of Al Aqsa Mosque.

Skirmishes at the end of the march evoked images from last year’s conflict with Gaza that saw rioting in Arab cities within Israel.

Israeli forces said on Saturday they had arrested four masked men in Umm Al Fahm who had “tried to block the entry to the city, fired flares, threw stones at forces and burnt tyres on the main road”.

Iran-S. Arabia talks resume in Iraq

Riyadh cut ties with Tehran in 2016

By - Apr 23,2022 - Last updated at Apr 23,2022

BAGHDAD — Regional rivals Iran and Saudi Arabia have resumed key talks in the Iraqi capital Baghdad after negotiations were suspended last month, a senior Iraqi official said on Saturday.

"Talks resumed last Thursday in Baghdad," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity, and without giving further details.

Iran's Nour news agency confirmed a meeting attended by "senior officials from the secretariat of Iran's Supreme National Security Council and the head of the Saudi intelligence service".

Iran and Saudi Arabia support rival sides in several conflict zones across the region, including in Yemen, where the Houthi rebels are backed by Tehran, and Riyadh leads a military coalition supporting the government.

In 2016, Iranian protesters attacked Saudi diplomatic missions in Iran after the kingdom executed revered Shiite cleric Nimr Al Nimr.

Riyadh responded by cutting ties with Tehran.

The talks in Iraq, which borders both Iran and Saudi Arabia, are the fifth round of meetings in the country in the past year between Tehran and Riyadh aimed at restoring ties.

"It is expected that a joint meeting between the foreign ministers of the two countries will be held in the near future," Nour said, describing what it called the "positive atmosphere of the recent meeting, which raised the hopes of a resumption of bilateral relations".

In March, Iranian media reported that Tehran had suspended participation in talks after Saudi Arabia announced it had executed in just one day a record 81 people convicted of various crimes related to "terrorism", including men linked to Yemen's Houthi rebels.

But in early March, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman said his country and Iran were "neighbours forever", and that it was "better for both of us to work it out and to look for ways in which we can coexist".

The comments were welcomed by Iran's Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian.

"We have different views and approaches on some issues in the region, but the management of differences by the sides can serve the interests of the two nations," Amir-Abdollahian said at the time.

Iraq exhibits restored art pillaged after 2003 invasion

By - Apr 23,2022 - Last updated at Apr 23,2022

Restored art pieces by renowned Iraqi artists are on display at Iraq's ministry of culture in Baghdad on April 6 (AFP photo)

BAGHDAD — Verdant landscapes, stylised portraits of peasant women, curved sculptures, an exhibition in Baghdad is allowing art aficionados to rediscover the pioneers of contemporary Iraqi art.

Around one hundred items are on display in the capital, returned and restored nearly two decades after they were looted.

Many of the works, including pieces by renowned artists Jawad Selim and Fayiq Hassan, disappeared in 2003 when museums and other institutions were pillaged in the chaos that followed the US-led invasion to topple Saddam Hussein.

Thousands of pieces were stolen, and organised criminal networks often sold them outside Iraq.

Tracked down in Switzerland, the US, Qatar and neighbouring Jordan, sculptures and paintings dating between the 1940s and 1960s have been on display since late March at the ministry of culture, in a vast room that used to serve as a restaurant.

"These works are part of the history of contemporary art in Iraq," ministry official Fakher Mohamed said.

Artistic renaissance 

Pictures and sculptures were in 2003 spirited away from the Saddam Arts Centre, one of Baghdad's most prestigious cultural venues at the time.

While he crushed all political dissent, Saddam cultivated the image of a patron of the arts. The invasion and years of violence that followed ended a flourishing arts scene, particularly in Baghdad.

Now, relative stability has led to a fledgling artistic renaissance, including book fairs and concerts, of which the exhibition organised by the ministry is an example.

It helps recall a golden age when Baghdad was considered one of the Arab world's cultural capitals.

Among canvases of realist, surrealist or expressionist inspiration, a picturesque scene in shimmering colours shows a boat sailing in front of several "mudhif", the traditional reed dwellings found in Iraq's southern marshes.

Other paintings, in dark colours, depict terrified residents surrounded by corpses, fleeing a burning village.

Elsewhere, a woman is shown prostrate in a scene of destruction, kneeling in front of an arm protruding from stones.

There is also a wooden sculpture of a gazelle with undulating curves, and the “maternal statue”, a work by Jawad Selim that represents a woman with a slender neck and raised arms.

The latter, worth hundreds of millions of dollars, was rediscovered in a Baghdad district known for its antiques and second-hand goods shops. It was in the possession of a dealer unaware of its true value, according to sculptor Taha Wahib, who bought it for just $200.

‘Priceless works’ 

Looters in some cases had taken pictures out of their frames, sometimes with cutters, to steal them more easily.

“Some pieces were damaged during the events of 2003, or they were stored in poor conditions for many years”, Mohamed, the culture ministry official, told AFP.

But “they were restored in record time”, he said.

Other works are being held back for now, with some waiting to be restored, but they will be exhibited once more, Mohamed pledged.

He wants to open more exhibition rooms to show the entire collection of recovered items.

“Museums must be open to the public, these works shouldn’t remain imprisoned in warehouses,” he said.

The 7,000 items stolen in 2003 included “priceless works”, and about 2,300 have been returned to Iraq, according to exhibition curator Lamiaa Al Jawari.

In 2004, she joined a committee of artists committed to retrieving the many stolen national treasures.

“Some have been recovered through official channels” including the Swiss embassy, she said, but individuals also helped.

Authorities coordinate with Interpol and the last restitutions took place in 2021.

The selection on display will be changed from time to time, “to show visitors all this artistic heritage,” Jawari said.

Ali Al Najar, an 82-year-old artist who has lived in Sweden the past 20 years, has been on holiday in his homeland.

He welcomed the exhibition.

“The pioneers are those who initiated Iraqi art. If we forget them, we lose our foundations” as a society, Najar said.

Jerusalem church glows in 'Holy Fire' ritual attended by thousands

By - Apr 23,2022 - Last updated at Apr 23,2022

Worshippers light their candles in the courtyard of Jerusalem's Holy Sepulcher Church, during the Holy Fire ceremony, on Saturday (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Thousands on Saturday celebrated the traditional "Holy Fire" ceremony of blazing candles at Christianity's holiest site in Jerusalem to mark the eve of Orthodox Easter.

Tens of thousands of faithful have attended the ceremony in earlier years, but coronavirus constraints severely limited attendance on the past two occasions.

This year, joyous, shouting faithful crowded together unmasked, holding aloft wads of thin candles bound together to produce thick orange flames that danced inside the darkened Church of the Holy Sepulchre.

The church is built on the site where according to Christian tradition Jesus was crucified, buried and resurrected.

Israel's foreign ministry gave a crowd estimate of thousands, who celebrated in a tense Jerusalem after days of clashes between Palestinians and Israeli forces at the nearby Al Aqsa Mosque compound.

The Church of the Holy Sepulchre and the rest of the Old City lies in East Jerusalem, occupied and later occupied by Israel following the Six-Day War of 1967.

Worshippers had waited from the morning hours with candles in hand. They cheered with excitement and bells rang in the early afternoon when Greek Orthodox Patriarch Theophilos III exited the Edicule, traditionally believed to be Christ's burial place, holding burning candles.

The flames spread from believer to believer, filling the ancient church with light.

Anthony Botros, who came all the way from Canada, said that being able to participate in the ceremony was "honestly surreal".

"I would not have imagined I would ever be here. It's something you can't describe. You just have to be there and experience it. Just tears. So peaceful," the 25-year-old told AFP.

Church leaders had initially been at odds with Israel over the event's size, after authorities sought to limit the number of participants to ensure their safety.

The Patriarchate petitioned the police decision at the supreme court, with a compromise allowing 4,000 believers to attend the ceremony in the church and square outside, a police spokeswoman told AFP.

The Greek Orthodox, Armenian and Roman Catholic denominations share custody of the church.

Christians made up more than 18 per cent of the population of the Holy Land when Israel was founded in 1948, but now form less than 2 per cent, mostly Orthodox.

 

Natural artist: Sudan painter uses tea and coffee to make colours

By - Apr 23,2022 - Last updated at Apr 23,2022

Sudanese artist Mutaz Al Fateh paints with colours derived from natural material, at his gallery in Khartoum, on April 15 (AFP photo)

KHARTOUM — Sudanese artist Mutaz Al Fateh creates vibrant pictures with special ingredients; the paint he uses is made with colours derived from coffee grounds, tea leaves and shavings of fruit peel.

"I have a special vision in art," the 39-year-old said, surrounded by his eclectic art hung on the walls of his gallery in the capital Khartoum. "I am particularly interested in using natural materials."

Many of his paintings feature colours derived from the fruits of the doum palm tree, and ground up fruit from the bulbous baobab tree.

Fateh has spent his career crafting everything from everyday life images of Sudanese men and women in traditional dress to abstract drawings.

He takes pride in extracting pigments of blue, purple, and red from hibiscus leaves, shades of brown, beige, and gold from coffee grounds, and hues of black and grey from date seeds.

 

'Spectacular colours' 

 

For many, these materials are simply food products, Fateh said. "But we can extract spectacular colours from them," he added.

Fateh says he mixes the colour extracts with gum arabic and other organic substances to ensure their durability on surfaces.

The artist has been using his special recipes to create his unique paint for years, producing a wide selection of paintings.

His quiet art seems a far cry from his activities three years ago, when Fateh was among the artists who painted street slogans on walls during a mass sit-in outside the army headquarters in Khartoum.

Even then, Fateh used his natural paint to daub on the walls.

The street mural backed the mass protests to end the three-decade rule of hardline president Omar Al Bashir, who was eventually toppled in April 2019.

"My mural there carried the slogan of 'Freedom, Peace, Justice' but it has been largely removed since," he said. "I can't remake this mural nowadays, I tried — but I was stopped."

Political unrest deepened in Sudan over the years, especially following the military power grab led by army chief Abdel Fattah Al Burhan last October.

The 2021 coup, one of several to have rocked Sudan since its independence, was followed by a wave of steep price hikes of basic goods including food, fuel, electricity and other essentials.

Fateh says his way of extracting colours to make paint is a good way for aspiring artists in Sudan to cut the cost of expensive materials.

"The natural materials I use are very cheap," he said. "They are widely available on the market, some could be even acquired for free."

Turkey calls in Iraq envoy to defend new offensive

By - Apr 21,2022 - Last updated at Apr 21,2022

ANKARA — Turkey on Thursday summoned Baghdad's top envoy to defend its decision to launch a military campaign against Kurdish militants in northern Iraq.

Iraq's charge d'affaires was called in a day after officials in Baghdad denied Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's claim that they backed the offensive.

Turkey launched its third campaign in northern Iraq since 2020 on Sunday, using special forces and combat drones to attack fighters from the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which has been proscribed as a terrorist organisation by Ankara and its Western allies.

Erdogan said on Wednesday that Turkey's push into the mountains of northern Iraq was being conducted in "close cooperation with the central Iraqi government and the regional administration in northern Iraq".

The Iraqi foreign ministry said Erdogan's claim was "not true".

The ministry for Iraqi peshmerga fighters in the country's autonomous Kurdish region also denied any cooperation or participation in the Turkish offensive.

Turkey's foreign ministry issued a softly-worded statement saying it called in Baghdad's envoy to convey its displeasure with the "unfounded allegations" made in the wake of Erdogan's statement in Iraq.

"As long as the Iraqi authorities do not take concrete and effective steps [against the rebels] and the threat posed by them from Iraq continues, our country will take the necessary measures on the basis of its right of self-defence," Turkish ministry said.

Some analysts believe that Iraqi leaders — while lodging formal protests — are privately happy that Turkey is trying to punish PKK, whose decades-long insurgency has claimed tens of thousands of lives.

Turkey's offensive was launched two days after a rare visit by the prime minister of Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region, Masrour Barzani, suggesting that he had been briefed on Ankara's plans.

Gaza rockets, Israel strikes stoke new Jerusalem confrontations

By - Apr 21,2022 - Last updated at Apr 21,2022

Flames and smoke rise during Israeli air strikes on central Gaza strip on Thursday (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Palestinian fighters in the Gaza Strip and Israeli warplanes exchanged fire on Thursday in the biggest escalation in months, followed by fresh violence at Jerusalem's flashpoint Al Aqsa Mosque.

Israel carried out air strikes in central Gaza after midnight, hours after a rocket fired by fighters hit the garden of a house in southern Israel — the first such fire to hit Israel since January.

The military said it had hit an underground rocket factory, prompting another volley of rockets from the impoverished territory, run by Islamist movement Hamas.

The exchanges come after nearly a month of deadly violence focused on Israeli-occupied East Jerusalem's flashpoint Al Aqsa Mosque compound, known to Jews as the Temple Mount.

Palestinians have been outraged by repeated visits by Israeli Jews to the site, the third-holiest in Islam and the holiest in Judaism.

By long-standing convention, Jews are allowed to visit but not pray there.

On Thursday morning, Israeli forces fired tear gas and multiple stun grenades inside the compound, AFP journalists reported.

The Palestinian Red Crescent said that over the past week Israeli forces had "forcefully removed worshippers" from the mosque, "using rubber-coated metal bullets, batons, tear gas canisters and pepper spray in enclosed spaces".

It said it had treated 202 people wounded in the violence since last Friday.

Israeli forces, however, accused dozens of "rioters" of throwing stones and petrol bombs from the mosque and "stopping Muslim worshippers from entering the mosque".

Seven Palestinians from East Jerusalem were arrested in connection with "violent incidents" on Wednesday, the police said.

 

US delegation 

 

Nearly a month of deadly violence have sparked international fears of a major escalation, a year after similar unrest led to an 11-day war.

US acting Assistant Secretary of State Yael Lempert and senior diplomat Hady Amr visited the region on Thursday.

After meeting them, Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid called for calm, saying Israel "will not accept, in any situation, rocket fire from the Gaza Strip".

Lapid said Israel is "preserving and will continue to preserve the status quo on the Haram Al Sharif" — contradicting Palestinian claims.

But Arab ministers meeting on Thursday in neighbouring Jordan said Israel should respect the status quo at the site, which is officially overseen by the kingdom’s Islamic Affairs Ministry.

The ministers condemned “Israeli attacks and violations against worshippers at Al Aqsa Mosque”, calling them “a blatant provocation to the feelings of Muslims everywhere”.

Tensions have been particularly high as the Jewish Passover festival coincides with the Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan.

Palestinians and Arab Israelis carried out four deadly attacks in Israel in March and early April that claimed 14 lives, mostly civilians.

A total of 23 Palestinians have been killed since March 22, including assailants who targeted Israelis, according to an AFP tally.

 

‘Death to the Arabs’ 

 

On Wednesday, Israeli forces had prevented hundreds of far-right Jewish nationalists from parading through the Muslim quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City.

Last year, a similar march had been set to start when Hamas launched a barrage of rockets towards Israel, sparking the 11-day war.

Far-right opposition lawmaker Itamar Ben Gvir led this year’s protest after being barred from the Damascus Gate area by Prime Minister Naftali Bennett.

On Wednesday, more than a thousand of Ben Gvir’s supporters gathered outside the Old City, some shouting “death to the Arabs!”

The demonstration stoked fears of a wider escalation a day after Israel had carried out its first strike on Gaza in months, in response to the first rocket fired from the Palestinian enclave since January.

It was intercepted by Israeli air defences.

But in the enclave of 2.3 million Palestinians, Umm Reem Daoud told AFP that residents were living in “a lot of fear”.

“We are afraid that things will escalate. Not even a year has passed since the last war,” she said.

“We hope in these blessed days that nothing will happen and that no one will be hurt.”

But Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said earlier Thursday that the movement was “determined to continue the struggle side by side with the Palestinian people to resist [Israeli] aggression no matter the sacrifices”.

The escalation has proved a political headache for Bennett, himself a right-winger and a key figure in Israel’s settlement movement but who leads an ideologically divided coalition government.

Earlier this month the coalition lost its one-seat majority in parliament — then on Sunday, the Raam Party, drawn from the country’s Arab minority, suspended its support for the coalition over Al Aqsa violence.

Erdogan says Iraq backs Turkey's push against Kurdish rebels

By - Apr 20,2022 - Last updated at Apr 20,2022

ISTANBUL — Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday said the central government in Baghdad supported Turkey's latest offensive against outlawed Kurdish militants in northern Iraq.

The Turkish leader's comments came a day after Iraq summoned Turkey's ambassador to Baghdad to lodge a formal protest against Erdogan's latest military campaign.

Turkey's armed forces have reported the death of two soldiers and dozens of Kurdish militants since the launch Sunday of their third offensive in northern Iraq since 2020.

Erdogan told a parliamentary meeting of his ruling party that both Baghdad and the leaders of the autonomous Kurdish region based in Erbil supported Turkey's ground and air assault.

"I thank the central government in Iraq and the regional administration for their support to our fight against terror," Erdogan said.

I wish success for our heroic soldiers involved in this operation, which we are carrying out in close cooperation with the central Iraqi government and the regional administration in northern Iraq."

Some analysts believe that Iraqi leader, while lodging formal protests, are privately happy that Turkey is trying to punish fighters from the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

The group is recognised as a terrorist organisation by both Ankara and its Western allies.

The PKK has been waging an insurgency against the Turkish state since 1984 that has claimed tens of thousands of lives.

But officials in Baghdad are publicly voicing displeasure over the Turkish military push into the mountains of northern Iraq.

Iraq handed the Turkish ambassador a "firmly-worded note of protest" urging its northern neighbour to "put an end to acts of provocation and unacceptable violations", the foreign ministry said Tuesday.

Israeli forces block far-right protesters from Jerusalem's Muslim quarter

By - Apr 20,2022 - Last updated at Apr 20,2022

Israeli forces keep Palestinians at bay in front of the Damascus Gate in Jerusalem's Old City, as they gather to watch Israeli protesters marching with national flags towards Tzahal square on Wednesday, during the 'flags march' organised by nationalist parties (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Israeli forces prevented hundreds of Jewish ultra-nationalist protesters from approaching Jerusalem's Muslim quarter on Wednesday to prevent more violence after weeks of tensions.

More than a thousand ultra-nationalist demonstrators carrying Israeli flags gathered in the early evening in a square outside the Old City.

The forces blocked hundreds of protesters from reaching Damascus Gate, which is the main entrance to the Muslim quarter of the city, according to AFP teams at the site.

Tensions have spiked in Israeli-occupied East Jerusalem amid nearly a month of deadly violence in Israel and the occupied West Bank, with the Jewish Passover festival coinciding with the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

"We want to go to all of Jerusalem and our government is not letting us," said Pnina, a 62-year-old civil servant.

Among the demonstrators were supporters of far-right lawmaker Itamar Ben Gvir, a controversial opposition politician. Some demonstrators shouted "death to the Arabs".

Ben Gvir himself had been barred from the area earlier in the day by Prime Minister Naftali Bennett.

"I have no intention of allowing petty politics to endanger human lives," Bennett said in a statement. "I will not allow a political provocation by Ben Gvir to endanger Israeli forces and render their already heavy task even heavier."

"Bennett, coalition security is not state security," Ben Gvir responded on Twitter.

Bennett, himself a right-winger and a key figure in Israel's settlement movement, leads an ideologically divided coalition government.

Earlier this month, his coalition lost its one-seat majority in the 120-seat Knesset, Israel's parliament, after a member left in a dispute over the use of leavened bread products in hospitals during Passover.

Then on Sunday, the Raam Party, drawn from the country's Arab-Israeli minority, suspended its support for the coalition following violence in and around Al Aqsa Mosque compound, where clashes between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli forces left more than 170 injured on Friday and Sunday.

Meanwhile, right-wing lawmakers are under pressure to quit the government, which is seen by some on the Israeli right as being too favourable to Palestinians and Israel's Arab minority.

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said he was "deeply concerned by the deteriorating situation in Jerusalem" and is in contact with parties to press them "to do all they can to lower tensions, avoid inflammatory actions and rhetoric", according to a statement by his spokesperson in New York.

Last year, the Islamist Hamas movement — rulers of the Palestinian enclave of Gaza — launched a barrage of rockets towards Israel when a similar ultra-nationalist march was to begin in the Old City, sparking an 11-day war.

Blinken urges Israelis, Palestinians to 'end the cycle of violence'

By - Apr 20,2022 - Last updated at Apr 20,2022

A general view shows the Dome of Rock Mosque in Jerusalem's Al Aqsa Mosque compound on Monday (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON — US Secretary of State Antony Blinken urged Israeli and Palestinian leaders Tuesday to "end the cycle of violence" after a sharp escalation in tensions between the two sides in recent days.

In separate calls with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid, Blinken stressed "the importance of Israelis and Palestinians working to end the cycle of violence in Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza by exercising restraint and refraining from actions that escalate tensions," the State Department said.

He also urged both sides to exercise "restraint" and refrain "from actions that escalate tensions" including at Al Aqsa Mosque compound, Islam's third-holiest site, but known to Jews as the Temple Mount, Judaism's holiest place, in Jerusalem's Israeli-occupied Old City.

In his call with Lapid, Blinken reiterated the US government's "steadfast commitment" to Israel's security and condemned recent rocket attacks from Gaza.

In his call with Abbas, Blinken affirmed the US commitment to improving Palestinians' quality of life.

But with both leaders, Blinken urged for a two-state solution.

The State Department announced on Tuesday evening that Yael Lempert, assistant secretary for near eastern affairs, would travel to Jordan, Israel, the West Bank and Egypt for talks aimed at “reducing tensions” in the region.

Her trip will last from Tuesday until April 26.

Israel carried out its first air strike on the Gaza Strip in months early Tuesday, in response to a rocket fired from the Palestinian enclave after a weekend of violence around the Jerusalem holy site.

The strikes come after weeks of mounting violence, with a total of 23 Palestinians and Arab-Israelis killed, including assailants who targeted Israelis in four deadly attacks.

The violence, coinciding with the Jewish Passover festival as well as the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, has sparked fears of a repeat of last year’s events, when similar circumstances sparked an 11-day war that levelled parts of Gaza.

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