The mother of 26-year-old Palestinian Ahmed Manasara kisses her son's body during his funeral in the village of Wadi Fukin, west of Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank on Thursday. Musa Al Shear / AFP
RAMALLAH: The governor of the West Bank city of Bethlehem said on Thursday that Israeli soldiers shot and killed an unarmed Palestinian man who was trying to aid another near the city.
Governor Kamel Hmeid said Israeli troops in the adjacent village of Al Khader fired at a car and wounded the driver late on Wednesday night. He said Ahmad Manasra was in the car behind and got out of his vehicle to help the wounded man, who was shot in the abdomen. As Manasra was returning to his car, the Israeli soldiers shot and killed him, he said.
"This is a summary execution and Israel bears the full responsibility for this crime," Hmeid said.
The Israeli military said a soldier stationed at a military post near Bethlehem identified rocks being thrown at Israeli vehicles and in response fired his weapon. The military said it was investigating the incident, which comes amid heightened tensions in the West Bank.
Wabeb Manasrah, a cousin of the slain Palestinian, confirmed the governor's account. He said they were trying to help the wounded man and that his cousin was going to drive his wife and children away when he was gunned down.
"There were no clashes, no stone throwing, nothing at all," he said. "I don't know why they shot him."
On Wednesday, the Israeli military said it shot and killed two Palestinians who had attacked troops in the West Bank city of Nablus.
The uptick in West Bank violence comes as Israel is currently in the midst of an election campaign and Egypt is trying to broker a long-term truce between Israel and Gaza's Hamas rulers.
Since 2015, Israeli forces have killed more than 260 Palestinians.
Associated Press