Organisers cancel controversial far-right Jerusalem march amid police dispute, Hamas threats

Organisers cancel controversial far-right Jerusalem march amid police dispute, Hamas threats
Far-right Israeli cancelled their controversial Jerusalem Day march after a dispute with the police over the route.
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The far-right parade has been cancelled [Getty]

Right-wing Israeli pro-settler groups scrapped a controversial march that was to take place this week in Jerusalem, a spokesperson said, as Hamas warned of renewed violence if the event took place.

The so-called March of the flags was due to take place on Thursday and proceed through flashpoint spots in Israeli-occupied east Jerusalem.

News of its cancellation came as Khalil Hayya, a senior Hamas figure of the Palestinian group Hamas, warned the march could spark new violence. It was not clear if the cancellation was linked to his remarks.

"Police refused to give us authorisation," a spokesperson for one of the groups organising the march said, prompting a cancellation of the event.

Israeli police said in a statement that "the current route at this time is not approved", without adding that the march had been scrapped.

"We warn the occupation (Israel) against letting the march approach east Jerusalem and Al-Aqsa Mosque compound on Thursday," Hayya said.

"We hope the message is clear so that Thursday doesn't become (a new) May 10," he said, in about the start of last month's 11-day war between Israel and Hamas, the Islamist group that rules the Gaza Strip.

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Right-wing organisers described the march as a routine demonstration of free expression, but many critics feared it could set a match to already inflamed tensions, that have come as a result of Israel's forced expulsion of Palestinians in the East Jerusalem neighbourhoods of Sheikh Jarrah and Silwan.

Israeli Defence Minister Benny Gantz had urged police to cancel it over concerns it could reignite fighting.

Thursday's march was set to pass through the Damascus Gate, where May clashes between anti-settlement demonstrators and Israeli security forces were a factor in fuelling the war.

A flag march scheduled for May 10 was quickly broken up that day after Hamas began firing volleys of rockets at Israel which responded with deadly air strikes.

That march was to mark "Jerusalem Day" and commemorate what Israelis consider as the "reunification" of the occupied city following the 1967 Six-Day War, when it unlawfully seized east Jerusalem before annexing it.

During the 1967 war, Israel occupied the West Bank, East Jerusalem, Syria’s Golan Heights and Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, which was later returned to Egypt under the terms of a peace deal.

From May 10 to May 21 Israeli strikes on Gaza killed 260 Palestinians, including 66 children and some fighters, and wounded over 1,900 people, the Gaza health ministry says.

Rockets and other fire from Gaza have killed 13 people in Israel, medics and the military say. Some 357 people in Israel were wounded.