Israel again prevents Palestinians from Friday prayers at Al-Aqsa
World
The ban has been in place since the latest outbreak of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict on 7 October.
The Israeli government has once again imposed restrictions on those wishing to offer Friday prayers at the Al-Aqsa Mosque in occupied East Jerusalem.
The military reportedly used force against Palestinians wishing to perform namaz in the area around Islam's third holiest shrine.
Security forces erected barriers around Jerusalem's Old City, preventing young and sometimes elderly Palestinians from entering the compound.
The military fired tear gas at hundreds of Palestinians who were forced to pray in the Wadi Al-Jawz neighbourhood near Al-Aqsa.
Israeli security forces also used "stink bombs" - special bombs containing a foul-smelling liquid whose odour is designed to disperse protesters - against Palestinian Muslims.
The ban has been in place since the latest escalation of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict on 7 October.
The military reportedly used force against Palestinians wishing to perform namaz in the area around Islam's third holiest shrine.
Security forces erected barriers around Jerusalem's Old City, preventing young and sometimes elderly Palestinians from entering the compound.
The military fired tear gas at hundreds of Palestinians who were forced to pray in the Wadi Al-Jawz neighbourhood near Al-Aqsa.
Israeli security forces also used "stink bombs" - special bombs containing a foul-smelling liquid whose odour is designed to disperse protesters - against Palestinian Muslims.
The ban has been in place since the latest escalation of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict on 7 October.
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