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Temple Mount and the Ultimate Nightmare
Jordan In Control of Temple
Mount Religious Authority Instead of PA, Report Says
By Julie Stahl --CNSNews.com Jerusalem Bureau Chief
Jerusalem (CNSNews.com) - For the first time in years, Jordan is in
control of the administration of the Islamic religious authority on
Jerusalem's Temple Mount instead of the Palestinian Authority, signaling
a weakening of the PLO and a shift in Jordan's role in the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, a new report says.
The Temple Mount, known to Muslims as the Haram al-Shariff, is one of
the most hotly contested issues in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and
has at times been a flashpoint.
Palestinians have rallied to the cause of the Mount dubbing the last
nearly four years of violence as the Al-Aksa Intifadah, the uprising
named after the Al-Aksa Mosque on the Temple Mount.
The Temple Mount, Judaism's most holy site and the third holiest site
after Mecca and Medina to Muslims, has been under Israeli security
control since 1967 when Jerusalem was reunited as a result of the
Six-Day war.
However, Israel allowed the Jordanian-administered Wakf Islamic
religious authorities to continue running the daily affairs of the site,
now occupied by two important Islamic shrines - the Al-Aksa Mosque and
golden Dome of the Rock.
In an act of defiance, Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat set
up shop in eastern Jerusalem and eventually appointed his own mufti of
Jerusalem, Sheikh Ikrama Sabri, and other Palestinians officials over
the Wakf, sidelining the Jordanian administration in the mid 1990s.
But according to The Expulsion of the Palestinian Authority from
Jerusalem and the Temple Mount, a publication of the Jerusalem Center
for Public Affairs, Jordan is back in control of the Wakf, due to a
persistent Israeli policy of pushing the PA out of the city.
"Israel has ended the Palestinian Authority's penetration of eastern
Jerusalem and its control of the Muslim Wakf on the Temple Mount,
restoring Jordanian religious administration of the Haram al-Sharif
mosque compound," wrote Dan Diker in the paper, citing Israeli media as
well as Israeli, Palestinian and Jordanian security and diplomatic
sources.
"The expulsion of the Palestinian Authority from Jerusalem and the
Temple Mount is the culmination of years of activity by Israeli security
forces," Diker said.
"Despite only a partial restoration of the status quo in Jerusalem, the
return of Jordan's traditionally moderating influence over the Muslim
Wakf administration sends an important message to those on both sides of
the Jordan River," he said.
Implications
Calling the new Jordanian an "important watershed," Dr. Dore Gold,
president of the JCPA, said that it shows that the PLO is losing its
grip.
"It points to a real trend to the weakening of the PLO presence," Gold
said by telephone.
"[Israeli] Prime Minister [Ariel] Sharon is firm in his position that
Jerusalem not be re-divided," said Gold.
With Sharon's disengagement plan confined to the Gaza and the northern
West Bank, West Bank Palestinians might have to choose in the future to
make a choice in the future between linking themselves to Jordan or with
what they consider the less desirable Gaza Strip, he said.
While Amman's resumed control of the Muslim Wakf "will not result in
Jordan's annexation of the West Bank," Diker said, that coupled with the
Gaza disengagement plan, "has perhaps created a new opportunity for a
greater cooperation between West Bankers and Jordan."
According to Gold, the Jordanian participation means that the "paradigm"
for an Israeli-Palestinian peace "has been reopened."
Jordanian Foreign Ministry officials were not available to comment.
Palestinian legislator Ziad Abu Ziad said that Jordan had always been in
control of the Temple Mount and, according to Israeli-Palestinian
agreements, the PA was not allowed to have any official presence in
Jerusalem.
When pressed Abu Ziad admitted that while "officially speaking" the
Temple Mount is under Jordanian control, "practically" it was in
Palestinian hands.
According to the Oslo Accords, the PA was not allowed to have any
presence in Jerusalem and the status of the city was to be discussed
only in permanent status negotiations.
But the PA set up institutions in Jerusalem following the signing of the
Oslo Accords and operated the Orient House in eastern Jerusalem as a de
facto PA Foreign Ministry, receiving diplomats and leaders from around
the world.
Two competing visions
During the Oslo process, the PA was rarely confronted with infractions
of the agreements it had made with Israel, but Israeli divisions
exacerbated the issue.
"Since the Oslo Accords there were two lines," said Gold. The Oslo
Accords, signed in 1993 on the White House lawn, represented the opening
of official relations between Israel and the PLO.
"There was the line adopted by current Labor Party leader Shimon Peres
that the Palestinians would have control over religious institutions in
Jerusalem," Gold said.
On the other side there was the treaty negotiated by the late Israeli
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin with the late Jordanian King Hussein, which
stated that, "Israel respects the present special role of the Hashemite
Kingdom of Jordan in Muslim holy shrines in Jerusalem."
When permanent status negotiations begin with the Palestinians, "Israel
will give high priority to the Jordanian historic role in these
shrines," it said.
"There were two competing visions," Gold said. When former Prime
Minister Binyamin Netanyahu was in office, he reinforced Rabin's
understanding, and made a reduction in the Palestinian presence in
Jerusalem a pre-condition to a deal on Hebron.
Gold was involved in negotiating a "Note for the Record," which was
attached to the redeployment protocol for Hebron in 1997.
One of the Palestinian obligations in that note stated that Palestinian
council offices and governmental activity could only take place in areas
where Palestinians had jurisdiction and not in areas where Israel
maintained control or in Jerusalem.
Four years later in August 2001 Public Security Minister Uzi Landau,
raided and closed the Orient House following a deadly suicide bombing in
Jerusalem.
Since then, Israel has arrested and expelled Palestinian security agents
in Jerusalem's Old City, Diker said.
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