Anti-Israel protests sweep Mideast

Published January 3, 2009

TEHRAN, Jan 2: Iran warned Israel on Friday not to launch a ground offensive into the Gaza Strip as protests against the Israeli bombardment of the Hamas-run Palestinian territory swept several Mideast capitals.

The demonstrations began shortly after Friday prayers in Tehran, Cairo, Amman and Damascus.

In Tehran, a crowd of about 6,000 marched from prayers at Tehran University to Palestine Square, chanting “Death to Israel” and “Death to America” and burning Israeli flags. They also carried banners reading: “Don’t kill Children” and “Real Holocaust is happening in Gaza”, while some vowed to “fight and defend Gaza”.

Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, one of Iran’s most powerful politician-clerics, said in a sermon to several thousand worshippers that an Israeli military defeat in Gaza would be a “scandal” for its government and that, even if the Hamas government there collapses, Palestinian “resistance” will only expand.

Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki warned Israel that entering Gaza “by land will be the biggest mistake of the Zionist regime.” He vowed Israel would be “defeated” in a ground attack.

Rafsanjani said Hamas had a new anti-tank weapon that it had not used before but would unleash if Israel ground troops move in, but he did not elaborate.

Pro-US governments have been wary about protests at home over Israel’s Gaza assault, which has killed more than 400 Palestinians and sparked outrage among the Arab public. Israel says its offensive aims at silencing Hamas rockets.

In Jordan, police fired volleys of tear gas and scuffled with dozens of protesters who tried to push through barrier to reach the Israeli Embassy in Amman. A few of the protesters threw stones at police, but the security forces dispersed the group, arresting several.

Hundreds more protesters marched peacefully nearby the embassy, calling for its closure and the expulsion of the Israeli ambassador. Jordan and Egypt are the only two Arab countries with peace agreements and diplomatic relations with Israel.

Egypt clamped down hard to prevent protests on Friday. Hundreds of riot police surrounded Cairo’s main Al-Azhar Mosque, where a rally had been called, and scuffled with would-be protesters, keeping most from approaching.

At another Cairo mosque dominated by the opposition Muslim Brotherhood, police set up security checkpoints and inspected worshippers’ ID cards. Around the capital, police arrested 40 members of the Brotherhood, which had called for pro-Gaza rallies.

In the southern Cairo suburb of Maadi, one mosque preacher called for holy war for Gaza and several protesters marched nearby, shouting: “Let us go to jihad.”

More than 3,000 people marched in solidarity with Gaza in the northern Sinai city of el-Arish, Egypt’s closest city to Gaza. On the border, dozens of Sinai Bedouins raced around in cars in the town of Rafah, firing their guns into the air.

In Syria, some 2,000 marched in Damascus’ Palestinian refugee camp of Yarmouk, carrying Palestinian flags and chanting “jihad will unite us”, and later burned an Israeli flag.

Several hundred Syrians also protested in Damascus’ historic Ummayad Mosque, waving green Hamas banners and wearing Hamas headbands.

In Sudan, thousands marched in downtown Khartoum from mosques to the main Martyrs Square, urging Muslims to jihad and denouncing Israel and America.

Small protests erupted as well in the Palestinian territories. In an Arab neighbourhood of east Jerusalem, a group of youths threw stones and smashed large blocks while Israeli anti-riot police on horseback dispersed them.

Three dozen Palestinian women marched out of Jerusalem’s Damascus Gate chanting, calling for revenge and urging Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah to hit Tel Aviv with missiles. Police dispersed the crowd.

JAKARTA, KABUL PROTESTS: More than 10,000 Muslims marched through Indonesia’s capital on Friday to protest the ongoing bombing raids in Gaza, aiming fake missiles

labeled “Target: Tel Aviv, Israel” at the US embassy.

Several thousand Afghans held a similar demonstration in Kabul, burning Israeli flags and chanting anti-American slogans. A smaller protest was also held in the Philippines against Israel’s assault, which has killed more than 400 people.—Agencies

Opinion

Editorial

‘Cruel jest’
Updated 02 Jul, 2024

‘Cruel jest’

Actual economic course correction has once again been put off for another time.
Limited choices
02 Jul, 2024

Limited choices

NONE of the limited choices before the international community where dealing with the Afghan Taliban regime are very...
India’s victory
02 Jul, 2024

India’s victory

IN the end, the best team won — the team that held its nerve best when the stakes were the highest. Batting...
Resolution 901
Updated 01 Jul, 2024

Resolution 901

Our lawmakers’ failure to stand united in the face of foreign criticism may not have been unexpected but it was still disturbing to witness.
Nebulous definition
01 Jul, 2024

Nebulous definition

IS it a ‘vision’, a loose programme, or an actual kinetic ‘operation’? A week on, we don’t precisely know....
Stealing heritage
01 Jul, 2024

Stealing heritage

CONTRADICTIONS define Pakistan. While the country’s repository of antiquities can change its fortunes, recurrent...