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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, January 25, 2020
Palestinian mosque torched in Israeli settler 'price tag' attack
Residents of Shurafat wake to find fire raging in mosque's bookshelves, carpets and minbar
Residents of Shurafat standing beside racist graffiti on their village mosque (MEE\Sondus Ewies)
Israeli settlers torched a mosque and wrote racist anti-Arab slogans on
its walls in the occupied East Jerusalem suburb of Sharafat village on
Friday, residents told Middle East Eye.
Al-Badria Mosque serves as a place
of worship for the residents of both Beit Safafa and Sharafat, two
Palestinian communities south of East Jerusalem and close to the
occupied West Bank's Bethlehem.
In the early hours of Friday morning, residents of Sharafat woke up for
dawn prayer and were surprised to find the fire raging in the mosque's
bookshelves, carpets and minbar.
Israeli police have closed off the mosque amid further investigation. As
a result, Sharafat's residents are anxiously waiting to be able to see
the extent of the damage.
Ismail Awad, the mukhtar of Sharafat, told MEE that he managed to put
the fire out himself before calling the Israeli police and fire brigade.
“I extinguished the fire in a quarter of an hour, and called my friends
to help me," he said. "Then I called the Israeli police, who are now
trying to make it a criminal case, not a terrorist one."

On the mosque's wall was scrawled “Destroys for Jews? Destroy for enemies”, and the names of illegal Israeli settler outposts.
Though all Israeli settlements are illegal under international law, some
outposts are unauthorised by Israel's own authorities, who occasionally
attempt to clear them of buildings and residents.
One of the outposts written on the mosque wall was Kumi Ori, near the
Yitzhar settlement, where two buildings were demolished in early
January, sparking Israeli settler protests.
'I called the Israeli police, who are now trying to make it a criminal case, not terrorist one'- Ismail Awad, mukhtar
Such vandalism by Israeli settlers against Palestinians communities are
known as "price tag" attacks, and are used to intimidate residents and
assert Jewish supremacy in territories Israel has militarily occupied
since 1967.
“Price-tag” attacks have become increasingly common in the West Bank.
Israeli daily Haaretz reported that the number of reported incidents
rose from 140 across all of 2017 to nearly 500 in 2018.
Last month, Palestinian residents in the East Jerusalem neighbourhood of
Shuafat woke up to find dozens of their cars and properties vandalised.
In addition to slashing car tyres and painting anti-Arab slogans,
“price-tag” attacks often include assaults on Palestinians, arson of
properties and sacred places, and cutting down trees belonging to
Palestinian farmers.
