Police crack down on Palestinian campaigning in J'lem
Palestinians detained for putting up posters; two activists questioned after rally.
By ETGAR LEFKOVITS
Amidst continuing ambiguity over Israel's stance on the participation of Jerusalem Arabs in the upcoming Palestinian elections, Jerusalem police on Tuesday broke up a small outdoor election rally held in east Jerusalem, and detained several Palestinians who took part in three separate election-related events in the city, police said.
The day began with police detaining two Arab residents of Jerusalem who put up election posters in the Christian Quarter of the Old City in the wee hours of the morning.
The two men who were detained overnight for allegedly defacing a public space were later released.
Later Tuesday, prominent Palestinian spokeswoman Hanan Ashrawi and a group of Fatah supporters held a late-morning election rally and a press conference at the Damascus Gate, police said.
Ashrawi refused to take down a Palestinian election banner she was carrying at the gathering and police confiscated it, Jerusalem police spokesman Shmuel Ben-Ruby said.
Ashrawi's assistant was detained for questioning for trying to prevent a policeman from carrying out his duties, while another participant in the rally, Dr. Mustafa Barghouti, was detained for being in Jerusalem illegally.
Barghouti, a distant relative of imprisoned Fatah leader Marwan Barghouti, who is running as an independent candidate, has been repeatedly arrested in the past for entering Jerusalem without a proper permit.
He was later escorted out of the city to the West Bank by Jerusalem police, and ordered to stay out of Jerusalem for the next 30 days.
Later in the afternoon, police dispersed a group of 50 Jerusalem Arabs who were holding an election rally replete with PLO flags near the Damascus Gate, police said.
Four participants were detained for questioning.
According to the Oslo Accords, Palestinian political activity is forbidden in the capital.
A day earlier, Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas publicly suggested delaying the planned January 25 elections, saying that the vote would be impossible if Israel did not allow Jerusalem Arabs to participate.
His remarks came amidst growing pressure from his mainstream Fatah Party to delay the vote due to Hamas' ever-growing popularity, with the Palestinian terror organization now forecast to capture as much as 40 percent of the vote.
Israel has sent out mixed signals over its policy on the issue, maintaining a deliberately ambiguous stance on the issue of east Jerusalem Arabs voting in the city.
At first, Israel ruled out any Jerusalem balloting due to the participation of Hamas in the race.
Hamas has been behind scores of Palestinian suicide bombings over the last five years of violence, and the international community, like Israel, defines the group, whose charter calls for Israel's destruction, as a terrorist organization.
But over the last couple weeks, Israel subsequently softened its stance on the matter indicating it would allow the balloting to go ahead in the capital, saying that it does not want to be blamed for any postponement of the vote.
The issue of Jerusalem voting is largely seen by Israeli officials as a red herring, with a compromise on the issue seen as likely.
In the past, Israel has allowed Arab residents of east Jerusalem to take part in two previous Palestinian elections via an absentee ballot at city and suburban post offices.