Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Israeli police clear Muslim rioters from Al-Aqsa Mosque

Arrests of 350 people • Police said they “vandalized, defiled and desecrated” the mosque • Muslim Fajr prayer was held as planned.

Israeli police officers during clashes outside the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem's Old City on April 17, 2022. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90.
Israeli police officers during clashes outside the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem’s Old City on April 17, 2022. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90.

Israeli police arrested more than 350 Muslim rioters on Wednesday who had barricaded themselves inside Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem.

The rioters, who had smuggled fireworks, clubs and stones into the mosque, blocked the doors inside using iron rods, closets and other objects, police reported.

Overnight, they chanted incitement, threw stones and shot fireworks at police.

Police attempted to convince the rioters to leave the site peaceably and when that failed were forced to enter the compound.

Following the removal of the rioters, Israeli forces left the area. The mosque was also cleaned, as the rioters had “vandalized, defiled and desecrated it,” police said. The Muslim Fajr prayer was held as planned with police striving to allow significant numbers of Muslim worshippers access to the site.

The Israel Police tweeted on Wednesday morning that terrorist groups continue “reckless incitement” on social media, “alongside false publications regarding the events in the area.”

If Israel is forced to prepare for a military confrontation with Ankara, it would require a fundamental rebuilding of the Israel Defense Forces, especially on the naval front, a process that could take years.
The complaint urges the Justice Department to determine “who funds, directs, coordinates, services and benefits” from the group’s work, and to sanction it for its alleged terror ties.
Yosef Dagan championed the penalty shootout after Israel’s elimination from the 1968 Olympics by the drawing of lots.
At a Tel Aviv gathering, volunteers hear the story of an Ethiopian immigrant’s journey to Israel as the organization seeks to strengthen its growing community beyond IDF bases.
The exhibit on the roof of the Azrieli Mall in Tel Aviv involves 11 large-scale installations of photos and poems.
The file is the first in connection with the ‘Law on Intensifying Punishment for Espionage and Cooperation with the Zionist Regime and Hostile States,’ passed by Tehran’s parliament in the fall of 2025.