Mistaken for a Palestinian, Israeli soldier killed by friendly fire in northern occupied West Bank

Mistaken for a Palestinian, Israeli soldier killed by friendly fire in northern occupied West Bank
"When news arrived that a soldier was killed, people in the town thought it was a Palestinian attack, and everybody panicked that the Israeli army was going to raid Tulkarem," said Fayez Taneeb, a Palestinian farmer.
2 min read
West Bank
16 August, 2022
The soldier was killed at an Israeli checkpoint in the Israeli separation wall. [Getty]

An Israeli soldier was shot and killed on Tuesday by soldiers of his unit at an Israeli checkpoint near .
 
the Israeli forces' spokesperson saying that the 20-year-old soldier had left his post to pray. Once he returned to the base, one of his fellow soldiers mistook him for a Palestinian and began to follow "arrest protocol".
 
According to Israeli reports, the confusion led to a shooting that severely wounded the soldier, who was later pronounced dead at the hospital.

The incident was initially misreported as "a shooting attack" against Israeli soldiers , and local sources said that Israeli forces had begun to deploy troops in search of the attackers.
 
"The checkpoint is just a four-minute walk from my home and farm," Fayez Taneeb, a from the village of Irtah, just outside Tulkarem, told .
 
"When news arrived that a soldier was killed, people in the town thought it was a Palestinian attack, and everybody panicked ," said Taneeb.

"People began to prepare for an Israeli incursion into the city and started to close doors, but then nothing of that happened, and life returned to normal," he added.

The checkpoint is . It is closed to Palestinians from the West Bank who want to cross into Israel but occasionally opens for Palestinians from Israel who cross into the West Bank.

The checkpoint is part of a series of checkpoints along the Israeli separation wall, two of which are near the city of Tulkarem.
 
Last May, while trying to cross the separation wall near Tulkarem at one of the checkpoints.