San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

AMERICAN TEEN KILLED IN SHOOTING IN WEST BANK

Israeli authoritie­s say the death is under investigat­ion

- BY RONI CARYN RABIN & RAMI NAZZAL Rabin and Nazzal write for The New York Times.

Family members of a Palestinia­n American teenager who was fatally shot in the occupied West Bank demanded Saturday that authoritie­s find the killer of the 17-year-old, who was hit by a barrage of gunfire, his cousin said, as the two were setting out to have a picnic near their village.

The death of the teenager, whom the family identified as Tawfic Abdel Jabbar, came as tensions have been rising between Israel and the United States. The State Department confirmed that an American was killed in the West Bank on Friday without releasing identifica­tion and called on Israel to provide more informatio­n about the death.

Without identifyin­g the teenager or confirming his death, Israeli police said in a statement Saturday that they were investigat­ing the shooting. Police said an Israeli civilian and an offduty police officer had fired at “individual­s purportedl­y engaged in rockthrowi­ng activities.”

The Israeli army was investigat­ing whether a soldier was also involved in the shooting, according to a military spokespers­on. The military and police did not respond to requests for comment beyond their initial statements.

A cousin, Mohammad Ejak, 16, said Tawfic was shot while driving to a grove of olive trees owned by the family, about a 15minute drive from their village of Al-mazra’a ash Sharqiyeh, near Ramallah in the West Bank.

“We did not throw any rocks at anyone’s car, and we didn’t even get out of our own car before the shots were fired at us,” said a visibly shaken Mohammad, who was among hundreds attending the youth’s funeral Saturday. He said he did not know where the gunshots came from and ducked below the dashboard when he heard the gunfire.

Tawfic was born to Palestinia­n parents and raised in a suburb of New Orleans, where he attended the Muslim Academy

Gretna Islamic School. The family, who have four other children, decided to return to live in the occupied West Bank when Tawfic was 16, about a year and a half ago, family members said.

“Where is my son’s killer?” asked Hafeth Abdel Jabbar, Tawfic’s father, during the funeral in the family’s ancestral Palestinia­n village. “He is an American citizen who was shot in cold blood, and as an American, he should be protected.”

Nabil Abukhader, principal of the Muslim Academy in Gretna, La., and the head of the local mosque that the family attended, said the teenager had hoped to improve his Arabic while in the West Bank.

He described him as a quiet, polite and “very respectful” teenager who helped his father with his shoe and clothing stores and often took his siblings to school. The young man was planning to study business administra­tion at the University of New Orleans, to help grow his father’s businesses, said Abukhader, who spoke with The New York Times.

The West Bank has been increasing­ly on edge, as violence and Israeli military raids have spiraled since the Oct. 7 Hamas assault on Israel. More than 340 Palestinia­ns in the territory have been killed in clashes with Israeli soldiers and civilians since Oct. 7, according to the United Nations. A two-day raid by the Israeli military killed at least eight people this past week.

John Kirby, assistant to the secretary of defense for public affairs, said in a State Department briefing on Friday that the United States had extended its condolence­s to relatives of the American who was killed, without directly naming them, and was “working to understand the circumstan­ces of the incident.”

“We’re seriously concerned about these reports,” Kirby said. “The informatio­n is scant at this time. We don’t have perfect context about exactly what happened here.”

But, he added, “We’re going to be in constant touch with counterpar­ts in the region to get more informatio­n.”

 ?? NASSER NASSER AP ?? Relatives mourn 17-year-old American Tawfic Abdel Jabbar at his funeral in the Palestinia­n village of Al-mazra’a ash-sharqiya, West Bank.
NASSER NASSER AP Relatives mourn 17-year-old American Tawfic Abdel Jabbar at his funeral in the Palestinia­n village of Al-mazra’a ash-sharqiya, West Bank.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States