One Palestinian and one international both shot in the chest with live ammunition
An 18-year-old Palestinian demonstrator and an International Solidarity Movement (ISM) volunteer, were both shot in the
chest with .22 live ammunition during a protest at Kufr Qaddum. The Italian activist, known as Patrick, was wearing a
yellow high visibility jacket when he was shot.
11 Palestinian demonstrators were wounded at the Kufr Qaddum protest. 18-year-old Sami Jumma was shot twice with live
ammunition, once in the hand and once in the chest. He required surgery and is now in a stable condition. The remaining
10 injured protesters were shot with rubber-coated steel bullets and four, including a 10-year-old child, required
hospital treatment. All four have now been discharged.
“We were standing with a group of Palestinian demonstrators when Patrick was shot. The military had fired three rounds
of tear gas, and then a shot rang out and Patrick stumbled back. There was between five and ten minutes from the last
tear gas canister fired and the bullet that shot Patrick. He was just standing there, peacefully protesting, wearing a
hi-viz jacket, he wasn’t doing anything and they just decided to shoot him.” Stated an ISM activist present at Kufr
Qaddum.
Patrick is currently stable. The bullet entered through his chest and is now lodged in his abdomen; he remains in
hospital under observation.
In 2003, Israeli forces closed the road connecting Kufr Qaddum with the city of Nablus, and since that time at least
three people have died due to the increased travel time to the closest hospital. A journey that used to take 10 minutes
now takes over 30. In 2011, Kufr Qaddum began their weekly demonstrations.
Ally Cohen, ISM media coordinator said, "The bullet entered Patrick's chest near a main blood vessel, but thankfully did
not puncture it. If God forbid it had, the lengthened journey to the hospital because of the closed road could have cost
Patrick his life."
ENDS