'Shabbat wars' heat up over Jerusalem parking lot

JERUSALEM (AFP) — Thousands of Jerusalem's ultra-Orthodox Jews demonstrated for a second day on Saturday against the opening of a car park during the sabbath.

Police arrested 23 protesters after stones and bottles were thrown. One stone seriously wounded a passer-by and three police officers were slightly hurt, according to a police report.

The series of protests in recent weeks, referred to in local media as the "Shabbat wars," have pitted the city's large and growing religious community against secular residents and local authorities.

Several hundred secular residents took part in a counter-demonstration.

The protests centre on the decision by the municipality to require a car park outside the walls of the Old City to open on Friday and Saturday, when religious Jews observe a day of rest from sundown to sundown.

During "Shabbat," as the day is known in Hebrew, ultra-Orthodox Jews are forbidden from working, driving, handling money or using electric devices.

On Friday evening around 30,000 religious Jews turned out to protest the parking lot and small scuffles broke out with police and news photographers, according to public radio.

Leading ultra-Orthodox rabbis, including Rabbi Ovadia Yossef, the spiritual leader of the Shas party which holds 11 seats in Israel's 120-member Knesset, have urged their followers to protest the city's decision.

They fear the parking lot will bring thousands of tourists into the area and encourage local merchants to open their shops, thus "profaning" the sabbath.

The majority of Jerusalem's roughly 500,000 Jewish residents are religious and the ultra-Orthodox are the fastest-growing segment of the population. However, Mayor Nir Barkat, who was elected in November, is secular.