UPDATED ON:
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 2007
17:14 MECCA TIME, 14:14 GMT
 
NEWS MIDDLE EAST
Unesco urges halt to Jerusalem dig
Unesco says Israel has already excavated the site enough to complete their pathway project [AP]
A report by UN experts has called on Israel to halt excavations near Jerusalem's most sacred Islamic site and proceed only under international supervision.
 
Israel's archaeological excavation, taking place 50m from a compound revered by both Muslims and Jews, have led to protests across the world.
The Paris-based United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (Unesco), whose experts have visited the site, issued a report on Wednesday questioning a "lack of a clear work plan setting the limits of the activity, opening the possibility of extensive and unnecessary excavations".

'Suspend the project'

 

The Unesco report has called on Israel to suspend the project and draw up a new work plan in consultation with Jordanian authorities and the Waqf, a body that oversees Muslim holy sites in Jerusalem. 

 

 

"Israel should be asked to stop immediately the archaeological excavations given that the excavations that have been undertaken were deemed to be sufficient"

Unesco report

Israeli archaeologists began excavations at the site on February 7 to salvage artefacts before beginning construction of a walkway leading up to the complex where the two biblical Jewish Temples once stood.

 

"The government of Israel should be asked to stop immediately the archaeological excavations given that the excavations that have been undertaken were deemed to be sufficient for the purpose of assessing the structural conditions of the pathway," the Unesco report states, according to officials.

 

If excavations proceed, Unesco concluded, they should be conducted under international supervision.

 

Mark Regev, an Israeli foreign ministry spokesman, said the Unesco report "shows clearly that the Israeli restoration work is totally benign".

 

Regev said Israeli officials had started a process to "re-engage with the relevant parties in an effort to allay concerns," but did not say that Israel would call off the excavations.

 

Unesco officials did not immediately comment.

 

Violent protests

 

Israel says the dig will do no harm to the Dome of the Rock and al-Aqsa mosques on the compound, which overlooks Judaism's Western Wall.

 

Israel's antiquities authority has placed internet cameras at the site and Ehud Olmert, the Israeli prime minister, has brushed aside fears the dig would harm the Muslim holy site.

 

The excavations led to violent Muslim protests in East Jerusalem, which includes the walled Old City where the compound is located.

 

Israel annexed East Jerusalem in the 1967 war, a move not recognised internationally.

 

It considers all of Jerusalem its "eternal and indivisible capital".

 

Palestinians want East Jerusalem to be the capital of the state they aspire to establish in the occupied West Bank and in the Gaza Strip.

Source: Agencies
Related:
Israel gags Al-Aqsa dig opponents  
(28 Feb 2007)
Arrests at al-Aqsa prayers  
(16 Feb 2007)
Israel ups policing at al-Aqsa site  
(16 Feb 2007)
Turkey and webcams survey al-Aqsa  
(15 Feb 2007)
Israel to continue Al-Aqsa dig  
(11 Feb 2007)
Protests continue over al-Aqsa  
(10 Feb 2007)
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