Jordanian king in occupied West Bank on rare visit
https://parstoday.ir/en/news/west_asia-i59446-jordanian_king_in_occupied_west_bank_on_rare_visit
Jordan's King Abdullah II has started an official visit to the occupied West Bank, the first trip in five years to the Palestinian Territories by the custodian of the al-Aqsa Mosque compound in al-Quds.
(last modified 2021-04-13T07:22:40+00:00 )
Aug 08, 2017 06:33 UTC
  • Jordanian king in occupied West Bank on rare visit

Jordan's King Abdullah II has started an official visit to the occupied West Bank, the first trip in five years to the Palestinian Territories by the custodian of the al-Aqsa Mosque compound in al-Quds.

According to Press TV, Abdullah arrived in Ramallah on Monday as President of the Palestinian Authority Mahmoud Abbas welcomed him on a red carpet near the king’s helicopter. There was no briefing with reporters.

Jordan’s official Petra news agency said in a statement that the king traveled to Palestine to hail the “steadfastness” of the people in occupied al-Quds against recent Israeli measures to restrict access to the al-Aqsa Mosque compound.

Abdullah said on Monday that the holy site “would have been lost many years ago” if it was not for Jordan’s custodianship and the steadfastness of the people in occupied al-Quds.

The site is the third holiest site for Muslims after Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia.

According to Petra, the Jordanian king also urged the United States to intensify its efforts to help bridge the gaps between the Palestinians and Israelis.

Israel installed metal detectors at the gates of the site three weeks ago after three Palestinians opened fire on Israeli police forces deployed to the area, killing two of them. Palestinians and the Jordanian government criticized the restrictive measures and protests continued until the regime in Tel Aviv removed the detectors and other barriers on July 27.

The peace treaty of 1994 between Jordan and Israel recognizes Amman’s status as the official custodian of the holy sites in al-Quds.

Jordan has not recognized Israel’s 1967 occupation of east al-Quds and other parts of the West Bank. Nearly half of Jordan’s population of 9.5 million is comprised of the descendants of the Palestinians who escaped the war and many of those refugees still live in camps in the country.

Many blame Jordan’s policies for the failure of repeated attempts for the establishment of a Palestinian state as the country enjoys close relations with Western governments that support Israel. Critics also say that Amman has always fallen short of piling enough pressure on Zionist regime over the expansion of settlements in the West Bank, a major impediment to the so-called peace process between the Palestinians and Israelis.

ME