Thousands Muslims packed Jerusalem’s Al Aqsa Mosque on Friday for praying

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Thousands of Muslims packed Jerusalem’s Al Aqsa Mosque compound on the second Friday of Ramadan, for prayers that saw no clashes with the Israeli security forces, an AFP journalist reported.

The Jordanian body which administers the mosque compound in Israeli-occupied East Jerusalem said that 250,000 people prayed at Islam’s third holiest site.

In past years, the Old City was the setting for violence during Ramadan, but no major incidents were reported on Friday.

The Israeli-Palestinian conflict had seen an upsurge of violence since the beginning of the year, raising fears of a flare-up during Ramadan. But the past 10 days since the start of the holy fasting month have seen a relative lull in violence.

Israel has been allowing Palestinians from the occupied West Bank to enter Jerusalem for Ramadan prayers, with COGAT, the Israeli defense ministry body responsible for civil affairs in the Palestinian territories, saying over 70,000 people crossed on Friday.

Posting images on Twitter of worshipers crowded at Israeli checkpoints en route to Jerusalem, Palestinian civil affairs minister, Hussein Al Sheikh, blasted the “strict and humiliating measures”.

The Israeli forces meanwhile announced the crossings from Gaza and the West Bank would be closed from Wednesday evening to Saturday night due to the Jewish festival of Passover.

Palestinians from the West Bank will be able to cross on Friday for Ramadan prayers.

The crossings will be closed again on April 11 and 12, the end of Passover, the army said, adding that exceptions may be allowed on humanitarian or medical grounds.

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