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People look through a window at damage inside a Greek Orthodox seminary in occupied Jerusalem on Thursday. Image Credit: Reuters

Occupied Jerusalem: Suspected Israelis torched part of a church-owned building in occupied Jerusalem overnight, police said, in the second racist attack in the Holy Land in two days.

The vandals set fire to an annexe of a Greek Orthodox seminary just outside the walls of occupied Jerusalem’s Old City, and scrawled “graffiti insulting Jesus” on the building, regime police spokeswoman Luba Samri said, describing it as a “nationalist” attack.

There were no casualties and the fire was put out before causing significant damage, she added.

On Wednesday, a mosque near Bethlehem in the southern West Bank was set alight and anti-Arab slogans in Hebrew sprayed on a nearby wall.

The Palestinian foreign ministry said that attack was tantamount to “an official declaration of religious war”, and the United Nations warned it could “inflame an already volatile environment.”

Both incidents bore the hallmarks of so-called “price tag” attacks — a euphemism for nationalist-motivated hate crimes by Israelis, which generally target Palestinians of the West Bank or Palestinian citizens of Israel but have increasingly also hit Christian and Muslim places of worship.