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Day 422 Jerusalem during “Al-Aqsa Flood” Operation
December 1, 2024

On the 422nd day of "Al-Aqsa Flood” operation, hundreds of settlers stormed Al-Aqsa and organized the monthly march on the eve of the "beginning of the Hebrew month", and arrests continued in the city of Jerusalem.

Al-Aqsa Mosque

358 settlers "265 in the morning, 93 in the afternoon" stormed Al-Aqsa Mosque through the Dung Gate, whose keys have been controlled by the occupation authorities since the occupation of Jerusalem.

The settlers performed their prayers during the storming of Al-Aqsa, collectively and publicly, and formed circles of dancing and singing in Al-Aqsa.

The monthly march

In the evening hours, the settlers organized the monthly march on the eve of the Hebrew month, and the settlers performed their prayers at the gates of Al-Aqsa from the outside, and walked from the Old City towards the Al-Buraq Wall, passing through the Lions Gate and the Dung Gate.

The police closed the roads and streets during the march.

Arrests

The child Ayham Al-Salaymeh, 14 years old, turned himself in to Al-Maskobyeh prison to serve his one-year sentence, on charges of "throwing stones at a settler’s vehicle" in Silwan.

Nawaf Al-Salaymeh, the child's father, said that the prison administration deliberately procrastinated and delayed the delivery of his son, as they remained in front of Al-Maskobyeh for several hours.

Al-Salaymeh said that the prison administration refused to bring in winter clothes and blankets for his child and forced him to take off his coat, hat and shoes before entering the prison.

Since last October and with the beginning of the war on the Gaza Strip, the occupation authorities have been taking a series of measures against prisoners in prisons, through continuous repression, starving prisoners, depriving them of treatment and medicine, not bringing in clothes and blankets, and preventing family visits.

The forces stormed the Shu’fat refugee camp and arrested the two young men, Taha Jaradat and Abdullah Mtour.

In a statement by the Israeli police, it said that last week, it arrested 301 Palestinians from the city of Jerusalem on the pretext of "illegal residence" in the city, and 33 people suspected of providing assistance to them.

Ben Gvir orders the confiscation of loudspeakers from mosques

The Minister of Internal Security, Itamar Ben Gvir, instructed the police leadership to begin confiscating loudspeakers used to broadcast the call to prayer from mosques, especially in cities within the occupied territories in 1948, on the pretext that "the call to prayer disturbs the settlers," and Ben Gvir demanded that fines be imposed in cases where "the loudspeakers cannot be confiscated."

Ben Gvir said in a post on his account on the X platform: "I am proud of the political leadership that aims to reduce the unreasonable noise emanating from loudspeakers in mosques, which has become a source of disturbance for the residents of Israel."