IQNA

Jordanian King Held in Disdain by Israel Again

9:44 - July 29, 2022
News ID: 3479879
TEHRAN (IQNA) – A request from Jordan’s King Abdullah II, that Amman be allowed to bring copies of the Quran into Al-Aqsa Mosque in occupied East Jerusalem al-Quds was rejected by the Zionist regime’s premier.

Jordanian King, Israeli prime minister meet in Amman

 

According to Israeli Broadcasting Corporation (Kan 11) the request was made during the meeting between King Abdullah and Israeli prime minister Yair Lapid in Amman Wednesday. Jordan had previously asked Lapid's predecessor, Naftali Bennett, to approve the move and he too refused.

Kan reported that Jordan has made the request to bring copies of the Quran into Al-Aqsa Mosque during every meeting officials held in Amman with their Israeli counterparts, including when King Abdullah II met Zionist regime president Isaac Herzog.

The Israeli-Jordanian understandings in the peace agreement in Wadi Araba recognizes Jordan's special status as guardian of Christian and Muslim sites in occupied East Jerusalem al-Quds.

According to Kan 11, Bennett had strongly opposed the Jordanian request, and Lapid informed King Abdullah II that "there is nothing new in this regard," referring to the continued Israeli rejection of the measure that "the Jordanian king is striving to take."

The channel stated that the occupation's security services in al-Quds, however, "supported or at least did not oppose" the Jordanian proposal.

The official Israeli channel pointed out that Lapid's objection is due to his own preference not to allow such a move during the election period, considering it a "diplomatic and political message" that may affect the results of Israel's November election.

 

Source: Middle East Monitor

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