Palestinian analysts expected that the flaring tension between Israel and the Palestinians over Jerusalem warns of an outbreak of more conflict between the two sides, unless an immediate and serious pressure is exerted on them to reach a peace agreement.
They warned that the ongoing crisis between the two sides over Al-Aqsa Mosque in East Jerusalem may fuse an explosion that leads to uncountable consequences.
Three Palestinians were killed and hundreds injured Friday in a series of clashes between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli soldiers in East Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, as part of protests against the construction of electronic gates at the entrances to Al-Aqsa Mosque.
After an emergency meeting of the Palestinian leadership, President Mahmoud Abbas announced Friday a freeze of ties with Israel on all levels until Israel commits itself to cancel all its procedures in Jerusalem, especially at Al-Aqsa Mosque.
"We reject the so-called electronic gates that were placed at the entrances to al-Aqsa Mosque. It is a political measure which aims at imposing control over the Mosque, evade the peace process and its benefits, and character the conflict from political to religious," Abbas said.
He added that East Jerusalem "is the eternal capital of our people, our state and our sovereignty over it and its sanctities, We will continue to protect it and work to liberate it and the rest of our land occupied in 1967 on the road to complete independence and the full sovereignty of the State of Palestine."
Ibrahim Abrash, a political science professor from Gaza, said that what is going on at Al-Aqsa Mosque is "Israel's plan to control the mosque as part of a broader plan for control and annexation of Jerusalem and the entire West Bank."
Abrash said that what is happening in Jerusalem and Al-Aqsa Mosque "reveals the Arab and Islamic backwardness and reveals the deteriorating Palestinian situation" in light of the internal Palestinian division that has been going on for 10 years.
"The Palestinians have no choice but to rally their forces and unify their political components to save the remaining land, sanctities and national dignity, and the fact that Arab and Islamic backwardness and weakness should not be a justification for Palestinian official and popular frustration," Abrash said.
Hani al-Masri, a West Bank political analyst, said that the clashes that broke out in Jerusalem and the entire Palestinian territories "clearly show that the Palestinian people are adhering to their freedom and their rights and ready to fight for it no matter how hopeless the situation is."
"If this situation continues and widens, there is a chance that it will escalate and it will be a pressure for re-calculation," Masri said, referring to the U.S. administration's move, fearing the explosion of the situation on the ground.
He added that "what matters to the American administration are two things, first is Israel's interests and security and second is its political efforts, and thus this ongoing popular action frustrates the United States before it starts efforts to resume the peace process."
Al-Masri expressed the hope that the implementation of Abbas announcement to freeze contacts with Israel "include the cessation of security coordination because this would force Israel to remove the electronic gates," adding that there were decisions taken by the Palestinian Central Council but not implemented.
Jihad Harb, a political analyst from Ramallah, estimated that the continuation of the current state of tension in the Palestinian territories "is linked to the extent and volume of Israeli violence against the Palestinian protests and the continuation of Israel's actions against Al-Aqsa Mosque."
"The Israeli government is destroying any horizon to talk about the peace process and its recent actions in Jerusalem," he said.