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Palestinians’ Emotions Run High After a Fire Destroys a Mosque A fire swept through a mosque in this Palestinian village of Luban Al-Sharqiya, angering Palestinians.
by Isabel Kershner, NY Times May 5, 2010
 A Palestinian reacts in a mosque after it was gutted by a fire in the West Bank village of Luban Al-Sharqiya near Nablus.
LUBAN AL-SHARQIYA, Samaria — A fire swept through a mosque in this Palestinian village early Tuesday, angering Palestinians who said they were certain that Israeli settlers were to blame, although investigators have found no proof. The Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, echoed those sentiments and warned that the blaze “represented a threat to the efforts to revive the peace process.”
Although the Israeli authorities were still investigating the cause of the fire late Tuesday and had not yet established that it was arson, the Palestinians’ conviction that it was the work of Israeli settlers was a reflection of the charged atmosphere in the Israeli West Bank ahead of a long-awaited resumption of peace talks.
The Obama administration’s envoy, George J. Mitchell, is scheduled to shuttle between the Israeli and Palestinian leaders this week, marking the beginning of the so-called proximity talks — the first peace negotiations in more than a year.
But in this village south of Nablus, emotions were running high.
“There is no doubt that those who committed this act are settlers,” said Majed Ismail Daraghmeh, leader of a committee responsible for recent renovations at the mosque.
As evidence, Mr. Daraghmeh pointed to a collection of Korans that had been neatly arranged in a semicircle and two piles before being burned in the fire and chronicled other incidents in recent years, like the burning of an olive press and of cars in the area, for which he also blamed settlers.
Israeli investigators, who examined the scene together with Palestinian security officials, said the fire was started from an electrical fault. Also, Islamic holy books were piled up on the floor in other parts of the mosque that were not damaged by the fire, having been removed from their shelves because of the recent renovations.
No Hebrew graffiti was found in or around the mosque, nor was there any obvious sign of a break-in.
 Palestinians walk through the mosque after the fire in the West Bank village of Luban Al-Sharqiya near Nablus.
A string of Palestinian politicians and religious leaders toured the charred interior of the mosque on Tuesday, including the prime minister of the Palestinian Authority, Salam Fayyad, and the Palestinian grand mufti of Jerusalem, Muhammad Hussein. Groups of local schoolchildren also filed through.
A legislator from the Islamic militant group Hamas, Hamed Bitawi, said the fire showed that “the Jews are killers, terrorists and criminals.” He added, “Our people should reconsider their strategy with them.”
Tensions have been running high between the Palestinians and settlers in the area. In December, a mosque in the village of Yasuf, also south of Nablus, was attacked by arsonists who left a message in Hebrew. Several settlers were questioned by the Israeli police in connection with the fire, but none were charged.
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