Khaled Meshaal, the political bureau chief of Palestinian terror group Hamas, warned Sunday that Israel is “playing with fire” by recently banning the use of speakers for the Muslim call to prayer. The Hamas leader also called on President-Elect Donald Trump to change the U.S. approach towards the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Meshaal’s comments were made during an interview with Andalou, Turkey’s official news agency, according to Muslim Press.com. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday that the ban, proposed by the Israeli government, is not a suppression of religion, but is only meant to protect against noise disturbance, Express.co.uk. reported Sunday.

Israeli Arabs protested the bill on Friday, marching with banners in the town of Kafr Qassem and other parts of the country. Joining the protest was Adel Badir, the town’s mayor, according to Times of Israel.

“We will not stop the muezzin [the person who leads the call to prayer] and will not stop our prayers,” Adel Badir was quoted as saying by the news organization. “Our right to a muezzin and to prayer does not derive from any law, it is a basic right, like the right to life, or the right to live under a roof. It is an inseparable part of our right to exist and to pray.”

Itamar Siani, an Israeli painter in Jerusalem, was quoted by Jerusalem Post as saying he agreed with the ban as a solution to the noise disturbance issue.

“I’m not against praying, but the problem is noise,” Siani was quoted as saying. “It disturbs people, it wakes you up, so if they lower it, what’s the problem? I hear the muezzin from my home.”

Hanin Zoabi, an Israeli-Arab MK known for her vocal criticism of Israel, disagreed.

“The issue is not about noise in their ears but about the noise in their minds,” Zoabi was quoted as saying. “What disturbs them so much is the noise of the Palestinians’ presence in their own homeland.”