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Israeli police drag away ultra-Orthodox protesters
1 of 4. An ultra-Orthodox protester is dragged by police during a protest in Jerusalem July 11, 2009 against the opening of a parking lot on the Jewish sabbath. Ultra-Orthodox Jews have clashed with police several times in the past weeks following the municipality's decision to open the parking lot on Saturdays.
Credit: Reuters/Darren Whiteside
JERUSALEM |
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli police dragged away ultra-Orthodox men who blocked traffic by sitting on a road outside the old walled city of Jerusalem on Saturday, in protest against a public parking lot now open on the Jewish Sabbath.
A police spokesman said one of several dozen protesters was arrested for lying under a bus. Television cameras photographed some half a dozen protesters being pulled away by their collars from the center of the road.
The protests spread to an ultra-Orthodox neighborhood where police on horseback confronted dozens of angry men in traditional black robes.
There were no reported injuries in the demonstrations that pointed up persisting tensions between Israel's secular Jewish population and a minority of Orthodox Jews that lobbies to keep businesses shut on Saturday, a day they regard as holy.
The Israeli mayor of Jerusalem, Nir Barkat, angered Orthodox Israelis by disrupting a so-called status quo to permit the lot to remain open on the Sabbath so as to relieve traffic congestion at a popular tourist destination.
Most shops in Jewish parts of Jerusalem are shuttered on the Sabbath in deference to the Orthodox.
Jerusalem, a city holy to Jews, Muslims and Christians, is also at the heart of Israel's conflict with the Palestinians. Israel has annexed Arab East Jerusalem, captured in a 1967 war, as part of its capital, a move not recognized internationally.
Palestinians want East Jerusalem as capital of a future state that they seek for the Gaza Strip and Israeli-occupied West Bank.
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