Palestinian Worker Shot Dead by Israeli Forces in West Bank
Palestine's Health Ministry identified the victim as Imad Haroun Hamdan Ishtayeh, 27, who succumbed to his wounds after being shot by Israeli forces. According to the Jerusalem Governorate, Ishtayeh — a native of Salem, east of Nablus in the northern West Bank — was struck by a bullet in the thigh, severing a main artery and triggering catastrophic blood loss before his death was subsequently confirmed.
In an earlier statement, the Governorate said the young man had been shot while attempting to scale the separation wall in a bid to reach his place of employment inside Israel — a perilous crossing thousands of Palestinian workers have been forced to attempt since Israel cut off their legal access to jobs in Jerusalem and Israel following the outbreak of the Gaza war in October 2023.
The human cost of that policy has been severe. Figures compiled by the General Federation of Palestinian Trade Unions show that more than 50 Palestinian workers have been killed and upward of 38,000 arrested between October 2023 and May 1 of this year. Stripped of legal work permits and with no formal pathway to their livelihoods, growing numbers of laborers have resorted to climbing the wall despite the mortal dangers involved.
East Jerusalem is encircled by a towering barrier constructed primarily of concrete and barbed wire — the vast majority of it built on West Bank land. According to Israeli human rights organization B'Tselem, the structure rises more than 8 meters (26 feet) and extends approximately 202 kilometers (125 miles). Israel maintains the barrier serves legitimate security purposes, but Palestinians and the UN contend it is a deliberate instrument of land annexation.
The wall's legal standing has long been contested at the highest international levels. In 2004, the International Court of Justice issued an advisory opinion declaring the structure illegal on the grounds that it was erected on occupied Palestinian territory — a ruling that continues to reverberate through international law and diplomatic debate to this day.
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