Netanyahu says Latin Patriarch will have full access to holy site
Netanyahu says Latin Patriarch will have full access to holy site 5 hours ago Maia Davies Israel's prime minister has said the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem will now have "full and immediate access" to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, after police earlier prevented him from celebrating Palm Sunday Mass there.
He said Iran had repeatedly targeted Jerusalem's holy sites with ballistic missiles. The decision to block the cardinal from entering Christianity's most sacred site had been criticised by several Western nations.
"This hasty and fundamentally flawed decision, tainted by improper considerations, represents an extreme departure from basic principles of reasonableness, freedom of worship, and respect for the status quo. "
Cardinal Pizzaballa later said while he did "not want to force the issue", "we had not asked for anything public, just a brief and small private ceremony".
Netanyahu said worshippers of "all faiths" had been asked not to visit sites in Jerusalem's Old City, which had been subject to strikes from Iran, and that police had acted out of "special" safety concerns in this instance. The traditional Palm Sunday procession into the city had already been cancelled due to restrictions on public gatherings.
Netanyahu said holy sites belonging to Christian, Jewish and Muslim worshippers had been "repeatedly targeted" by Iranian missile strikes in recent days. "In one strike, missile fragments crashed meters from the Church of the Holy Sepulchre," he said in a statement on X, adding that Sunday's decision involved "no malicious intent whatsoever".
Then, late on Sunday night, Netanyahu announced he had instructed relevant authorities to grant the Latin Patriarch "full and immediate access" to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre so he can "hold services as he wishes".
A US state department spokesperson told BBC News: "We encourage the Government of Israel to facilitate the safe observance of Holy Week. " They also noted "the difficult security conditions in Jerusalem that have arisen from Iran's ongoing, indiscriminate missile attacks".
French President Emmanuel Macron likewise condemned the move and said it came in the context of "the worrying increase in violations of the status of the Holy Places in Jerusalem". And Pope Leo XIV, speaking in Rome on Sunday, paid tribute to "the Christians of the Middle East, who suffer the consequences of a terrible conflict and in many cases cannot fully live the rites of these holy days"
Logic Quality Breakdown:
- Updated_At:
- Truth_Blocks:
- Analysis_Method: