Israeli troops shoot Turkish-American woman dead at West Bank protest, officials say

RAMALLAH, West Bank — Israeli troops shot and killed a Turkish-American woman who had been taking part in a protest against settlement expansion in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Friday, Palestinian and Turkish officials said.

The White House said it was deeply disturbed by the death of Aysenur Ezgi Eygi and called on Israel to investigate. Turkey’s foreign ministry said she was shot in the head, and placed blame on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government for her death.

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Palestinian officials described her as a 26-year-old activist from Seattle who held both U.S. and Turkish citizenship.

Eygi graduated from the University of Washington in Seattle recently, the school’s president, Ana Mari Cauce, said in a statement that described news of her death as “awful” while adding that Eygi had a “positive influence” on other students.

Israel’s military said its troops had fired toward a male “main instigator” who posed a threat by hurling rocks at soldiers.

The military was looking into reports that a female foreign national “was killed as a result of shots fired in the area. The details of the incident and the circumstances in which she was hit are under review.” There was no immediate comment on the incident from Netanyahu’s office.

Fouad Nafaa, head of Rafidia Hospital in Nablus, told Reuters that Eygi arrived there in critical condition, with a serious head injury.

“We tried to perform a resuscitation operation on her, but unfortunately she died,” he said.

The Palestinian Authority’s official news agency, WAFA, said the incident occurred during a regular protest march by activists in Beita, a village near Nablus that has seen repeated attacks on Palestinians by Jewish settlers.

Aria Fani, an assistant professor of Middle Eastern languages and cultures at the University of Washington, described Eygi as exceptional and kind in comments to the media.

“I begged her not to go (to the West Bank), but she had this deep conviction that she wanted to participate in the tradition of bearing witness to the oppression of people and their dignified resilience,” Fani told the Guardian, adding Eygi participated in recent university campus protests opposing U.S. support for Israel’s war in Gaza.

“Aysenur was a peer mentor in psychology who helped welcome new students to the department and provided a positive influence in their lives,” the university president said separately in a statement.

In a statement, Sean Savett, a spokesperson for the White House’s National Security Council, said Washington was “deeply disturbed by the tragic death of an American citizen” in the West Bank on Friday.

“We have reached out to the Government of Israel to ask for more information and request an investigation into the incident,” Savett said.

U.S. Senator Chris Van Hollen said Eygi was the third American killed in the West Bank since Oct. 7, when Hamas militants’ attack on Israel sparked war in Gaza and a resurgence of West Bank violence.

“Biden Administration has not been doing enough to pursue justice and accountability on their behalf,” Van Hollen, a Democrat, who sits on the Senate’s Foreign Relations committee, said. “If the Netanyahu Government will not pursue justice for Americans, the U.S. Department of Justice must.”

Turkey’s President Tayyip Erdogan condemned Eygi’s death, saying in a post on social media that Turkey “will continue to work in every platform to halt Israel’s policy of occupation and genocide.”

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