Israeli soldiers shot and killed American activist Aysenur Ezgi Eygi on Friday while she was protesting an illegal settlement in the occupied West Bank, according to local media reports.
The killing of 26-year-old Eygi, who lived in the Seattle area, immediately prompted concerns that the United States government would not respond appropriately and seek accountability for her killing.
Earlier this year, two 17-year-old Palestinian Americans were killed in the West Bank: Tawfic Abdel Jabbar, a Louisiana native who was shot in January by an off-duty Israeli officer and a settler, and Mohammad Khdour, a high school senior from Florida who was shot in the head by an Israeli gunman several weeks later. In both cases, the U.S. government decried the killings but have yet to launch investigations.
Lara Friedman, president of the Foundation for Middle East Peace, told The Intercept that such muted responses from the U.S government after the killings of American citizens in the occupied West Bank has become de facto policy.
“The policy of the U.S. government, both the executive and legislative branches, has effectively been that not all Americans are equal when it comes to dying in the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians,” Friedman said. “Israeli Americans are worth fighting for accountability and Palestinian Americans and Americans who stand with them are not. It almost feels farcical to have to say that out loud, because the record is so clear.”
Friedman, a former U.S. diplomat in Jerusalem, recalled the death of fellow American peace activist Rachel Corrie, who was crushed by an armored Israeli bulldozer in 2003 while she protested against the demolition of Palestinian homes in the West Bank. Eygi, like Corrie, was a volunteer with the International Solidarity Movement, an organization dedicated to nonviolent support of Palestinian popular resistance to the Israeli occupation.
Corrie’s death was ultimately ruled by Israeli officials as an accident, a conclusion rejected by human rights organizations, who pointed to patterned killings. Friedman, who at the time was an activist with Americans for Peace Now, which opposes settlement expansion in the West Bank, said Corrie’s “crime was being in line with Palestinian rights.”
She also recalled the 2021 killing of prominent Palestinian American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh. An Israeli sniper shot and killed her while she was wearing a press vest covering an Israel Defense Forces raid in the Jenin refugee camp in the West Bank. Forensic evidence showed her killing to be intentional, though an FBI probe into her death remains pending with U.S. officials, having gone silent.
“We have a president who says if you hurt Americans, you will pay,” Friedman said, referring to President Joe Biden’s comments made after three American soldiers were killed by a drone strike in Jordan. “That is clearly not the case if the Americans are Palestinian American or if they are sympathetic and standing with Palestinians.”
Eygi, an American of Turkish descent, had been in the area of Beita, a town located south of Nablus, with the Faz’a campaign, which works to support and protect Palestinian farmers from Israeli military and settler violence, according to Wafa, state media for the Palestinian Authority.
Israeli soldiers had reportedly responded to the protest by firing live ammunition, stun grenades, and tear gas at demonstrators, striking Eygi and injuring an 18-year-old Palestinian who was struck by shrapnel in the thigh, the report said. Other reports say an Israeli sniper fired and shot Eygi in the head. Eygi was rushed to Rafidia Hospital in Nablus where she died.
An IDF spokesperson said in a statement that its soldiers had been in the area near Beita on Friday and had fired shots at “a main instigator of violent activity” who allegedly threw rocks at soldiers.
“The IDF is looking into reports that a foreign national was killed as a result of shots fired in the area,” the statement read, adding that the incident and how Eygi was hit was under review.
The U.S. Ambassador to Israel Jack Lew said he was aware of Eygi’s death on Friday morning in a statement posted on social media.
“We offer our deepest condolences to her family and loved ones,” Lew said. “We are urgently gathering more information about the circumstances of her death, and will have more to say as we learn more. We have no higher priority than the safety and security of American citizens.”
Eygi’s death comes as Israeli forces have escalated its aggression in the West Bank, conducting large military operations in the northern part of the occupied territory. The majority of attacks have taken place in Jenin, where the IDF recently ended a nine-day occupation of the city, raiding homes, destroying roads and other civilian infrastructure, besieging hospitals, and killing dozens, including several civilians. Among the dead was a 16-year-old Palestinian girl who was shot by an Israeli sniper as she looked out of her window, the girl’s father told reporters. An Intercept investigation earlier this year found that nearly half of the people killed by Israeli airstrikes in the West Bank in the past year have been children.
Eygi had recently graduated with a degree in psychology and a minor in Middle Eastern Languages and Cultures from the University of Washington this past June, according to her LinkedIn page. She had experience working locally and internationally with children with autism and had volunteered offering rehabilitative support for under-sources communities.
Eygi had joined protesters demonstrating against the expansion of an illegal settlement outpost, Evyatar, which was built in 2013 atop Palestinian land in Jabal Sbeih, outside of Beita. Over the past several years, Palestinian residents from Beita, alongside international activists, have held regular protests at the outpost, who are often met with violent responses from the Israeli military.
According to a 2023 report by Palestinian human rights organization Al-Haq, Israeli forces killed 10 Palestinians and injured over 6,000 protesters at Jabal Sbeih in a single year from May 2021 to May 2022.
The analysis of the injuries revealed that the majority were caused by live bullets or rubber-coated metal bullets aimed at protesters’ lower limbs, as part of Israel’s “shoot-to-maim” policy. Some injuries also resulted from rubber-coated bullets fired at protesters’ heads, leading to Beita residents losing eyes and sustaining fractured skulls.
A volunteer from the International Solidarity Movement who was present at the Beita protest described the moment Israeli forces began firing shots and tear gas at the protesters, including men and children praying. The volunteer, known as Mariam Dag, recounted the incident where their fellow volunteer, Eygi, was shot in the head despite being positioned away from the soldiers.
The killing of Eygi was condemned as another example of the long-standing impunity granted to the Israeli government and army, supported by the US and European governments. Another ISM volunteer expressed grief over the loss of their friend and denounced the violence inflicted by the Israeli Occupation Forces.
Eygi was the 18th demonstrator killed in protests at Beita since 2020. The group also mentioned the case of Amado Sison, another American volunteer, who was shot in the leg with live ammunition weeks prior.
There are calls for accountability for Eygi’s death, with hopes that the US would respond equally regardless of political ideologies. It is emphasized that all lives should be valued, without discrimination based on political affiliations.
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