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ConflictBarometer_2015

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MIDDLE EAST AND MAGHREB<br />

state between the Palestinian National Authority (PNA), led<br />

by President Mahmoud Abbas of the al-Fatah party, and the<br />

Israeli government continued. On January 1, the Government<br />

of Palestine accepted the jurisdiction of the International<br />

Criminal Court retroactively from 07/13/14, acceding to the<br />

Rome Statute on January 2.<br />

Throughout the year, Palestinians increasingly attacked Israeli<br />

security personnel and civilians. Especially stabbing attacks<br />

and car ramming attacks increased. For instance, on March 6,<br />

a Palestinian drove his car into a crowd of people standing<br />

at a tram stop near Jerusalem. At least five people were<br />

injured. After the attack, the perpetrator attempted to stab<br />

passengers with a knife before he was shot and wounded by<br />

the Israeli police. Subsequently, Israel Defense Forces (IDF)<br />

conducted raids, searches, and arrests in the West Bank and<br />

East Jerusalem.<br />

Furthermore, Israeli settlers repeatedly attacked Palestinians.<br />

For instance, on July 31, Israeli settlers carried out an arson<br />

attack in the village of Duma, West Bank, killing a toddler and<br />

his parents. Following this incident, hundreds of Palestinians<br />

gathered in Duma vowing to take revenge. Subsequently,<br />

Israelis and Palestinians clashed in Jerusalem's Old City and<br />

the West Bank numerous times. On September 13, the Israeli<br />

police entered the Al-Aqsa Mosque after being told<br />

that Palestinians planned attacks on Jews visiting the Temple<br />

Mount. They fired rubber bullets and stun grenades, injuring<br />

several worshippers. Palestinian protesters threw stones and<br />

firework. On September 18, two Palestinians were shot and<br />

wounded while throwing firebombs at Rachel's Tomb in Bethlehem.<br />

Furthermore, on October 3, a Palestinian stabbed and<br />

killed two Israelis in Jerusalem's Old City, further wounding<br />

one woman and one toddler. After these attacks, on October<br />

4, Israel imposed a 48-hour ban on Palestinians to enter the<br />

Old City. The day after, hundreds of Arab Israelis protested.<br />

The imposition of the ban was followed by a series of Palestinian<br />

attacks on a nearly daily basis. Proclaiming a ''Day of<br />

Rage'' on October 13, Palestinians in several locations killed<br />

three Israelis and wounded several others.<br />

Calling for an end to the violence and for meaningful negotiations,<br />

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon met separately<br />

with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian<br />

President Mahmoud Abbas in Jerusalem on October<br />

20. Despite the visit, violence did not subside until the end<br />

of the year. ari<br />

fired batons against protesters who tried to march to the<br />

French Embassy. In February, after 70 years, MB formalized<br />

its severance into two factions. Members belonging to<br />

the Jordanian Building Initiative called Zamzam Initiative declared<br />

their breakaway from the main organization after the<br />

MB Shura Council had expelled them from the organization<br />

on February 14. Thereafter, the Zamzam Initiative applied<br />

for registration as legal association under the name ''Muslim<br />

Brotherhood''. On March 3, the Ministry of the Interior approved<br />

the legal status of the breakaway faction and thereby<br />

made it the only legal society by the name of ''Muslim Brotherhood''.<br />

The government declared the remaining MB faction<br />

illegal. Subsequently, the ability of the now illegal MB organization<br />

to assemble was limited. On April 23, Minister of the<br />

Interior Hussein al-Majali announced a prohibition of assemblies<br />

of groups that would aim at imposing their agenda on<br />

the country. The government denied the old MB faction to<br />

celebrate its 70th anniversary on April 30 in a public rally,<br />

arguing that it was now an illegal group.<br />

On May 28, the Legislation and Opinion Bureau permitted the<br />

government to transfer properties of the old MB to the newly<br />

licensed MB group. The legal dispute continued in July when<br />

the government's Department of Land and Survey transferred<br />

ownership of seven properties worth several millions of dollars<br />

to the new MB. During Ramadan, the government banned<br />

the original MB from organizing public prayers, but approved<br />

the holding of an Iftar for MB (Zamzam). Until December, a<br />

total of 28 leaders resigned from the old MB and joined MB<br />

(Zamzam).<br />

Furthermore, on September 6, the Jordanian Opposition<br />

Coalition announced its election platform. anm<br />

LEBANON (SUNNI MILITANT GROUPS)<br />

Intensity: 4 | Change: | Start: 2014<br />

Conflict parties:<br />

Conflict items:<br />

Jabhat al-Nusra, Sunni militant<br />

groups vs. government, Hezbollah<br />

secession, system/ideology, subnational<br />

predominance<br />

JORDAN (OPPOSITION)<br />

Intensity: 1 | Change: | Start: 2011<br />

Conflict parties: Muslim Brotherhood vs. Muslim<br />

Brotherhood (Zamzam) vs. opposition<br />

groups vs. government<br />

Conflict items: system/ideology, national power<br />

The violent crisis between opposition groups, the Muslim<br />

Brotherhood (MB), its breakaway faction MB (Zamzam), and<br />

the government over national power and the orientation of<br />

the political system continued.<br />

In a 2,000-strong demonstration organized by the MB after<br />

Friday prayers on January 16, protesters clashed with security<br />

forces in the capital Amman. The protesters chanted paroles<br />

against the French magazine ''Charlie Hebdo'' as well as King<br />

Abdullah II bin al-Hussein and Queen Rania al-Abdullah for<br />

their participation in the commemoration of the victims of<br />

the January 8 Paris attacks [→ Iraq, Syria et al. (IS)]. Police<br />

The limited war over subnational predominance between<br />

Sunni militant groups, most notably al-Qaida affiliate Jabhat<br />

al-Nusra, on the one hand, and the government and Shiite<br />

militia Hezbollah, on the other, continued.<br />

The conflict was affected by the Syrian civil war and IS'<br />

attempt to establish a base in Lebanon's northeastern border<br />

region [→ Syria (opposition); Syria, Iraq et al. (IS)]. It mainly<br />

took place in the Beqaa governorate, specifically in and<br />

around the cities of Arsal, Baalbek, and Ras Baalbek, but also<br />

spread to Tripoli, Northern governorate. Since the 08/02/14<br />

attack by ISIS and al-Nusra in Arsal, the Lebanese Armed<br />

Forces (LAF) maintained its hold on Arsal and continued to<br />

execute its security plan in the Beqaa Valley, which included<br />

a heightening of security measures and widespread raids and<br />

arrests.<br />

Between January and June, the LAF and Hezbollah gained<br />

control of multiple militant's positions in the proximity of<br />

the border with Syria, which were important for entering<br />

175

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