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​Israel authorizes sealing off parts of Jerusalem

A youth walks past graffiti depicting Mohammed Abu Khudair, who was killed in a revenge attack by Israelis in 2014, on a street in Nazareth, northern Israel October 12, 2015. Israel's leading Arab politician was in the middle of a television interview on a street in its biggest Arab city when the mayor, also an Arab, pulled up in his car and started shouting at him to leave. With Palestinian knife attacks on the rise, the live TV encounter illustrated a conflict within Israel's Arab minority between sympathy for Palestinian brethren in Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza, and concern over a Jewish backlash. Picture taken October 12, 2015. REUTERS/Baz Ratner

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Jerusalem (IINA) – Israel began setting up checkpoints in Palestinian areas of Occupied East Jerusalem on Wednesday as it struggled to stop a wave of attacks that have raised fears of a full-scale uprising.
A police spokeswoman said checkpoints were being set up at “the exits of Palestinian villages and neighborhoods in east Jerusalem,” where most of the recent attackers have come from. Meanwhile, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Tuesday he plans to travel to the Middle East to try to calm violence between Palestinians and Israelis and move the situation “away from this precipice.” The trip would mark Kerry’s most direct efforts to broker peace between the two sides since talks led by the United States failed last year. Israel and the Palestinian territories are experiencing their worst unrest in years.

“I will go there soon, at some point appropriately, and try to work to reengage and see if we can’t move that away from this precipice,” Kerry told an audience at an event sponsored by Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs.
At least seven Israelis and 29 Palestinians, including 10 alleged attackers, have died in the violence. Kerry said the United States’ goal for the region, the two-state solution, “could conceivably be stolen from everybody” if violence were to spiral out of control. Days of violence have been stirred in part by Muslim agitation over increasing Jewish visits to the al-Aqsa mosque compound in Occupied Jerusalem, Islam’s holiest site outside the Arabian Peninsula. The escalating violence has raised speculation that Palestinians could be embarking on another uprising or intifada, reflecting a new generation’s frustrations over their veteran leadership’s failure to achieve statehood.

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