One child was shot while sitting on her mother's lap. Another, hit by an airstrike as he stepped inside his home. Two others, killed while playing outside with friends.
Israeli gunfire has killed at least 18 children under the age of 15 in the occupied West Bank this year, according to the United Nations. That follows 29 children killed in 2023 and 23 in 2024 — a surge accompanying the outbreak of Israel's war against Hamas in Gaza since 7 October 2023.
Some were killed during Israeli military raids in dense neighbourhoods, others by sniper fire in peaceful areas. The killings have risen as the Israeli military has stepped up operations in the occupied West Bank since the war's onset in what it calls ‘a crackdown on militants’.
🚨Israeli soldiers detained two Palestinian children, accusing them of being spies in Al-Khalil, West Bank today. When passersby questioned why such young children were detained, the army told the to stop filming. The soldiers demanded to know where the boys' father was and… pic.twitter.com/KOdT0xpUxQ
— Translating Falasteen (Palestine) (@translatingpal) September 29, 2025
The Associated Press spoke with several families whose children were killed this year. With Israel's history of rarely punishing its soldiers for deadly violence, some families doubt there will ever be any accountability.
The military told AP that its rules of engagement “strictly prohibit intentional fire” at civilians, calling claims it targets minors “false” and “baseless.” It said it had launched investigations into some cases.
But it gave no word that any soldiers have been disciplined, and the families say they've received little information about how and why their children were killed.
A new report from @DCIPalestine finds that Israeli forces and settlers killed Palestinian children in the West Bank at a rate of one every two days from October 7, 2023–July 31, 2024.
— Visualizing Palestine (@visualizingpal) September 10, 2024
Learn more: https://t.co/i8bzYlgnRm#ArmsEmbargoNow pic.twitter.com/eSvwecprVa
Here are some of their stories, as they've told them to AP:
Layla (2)Tayma Asous, a water engineer and single mother living in a quiet Jenin neighborhood, recalls daughter Layla Al-Khatib as precocious and intelligent — always wanting to play pretend.
On January 25, while Layla sat on Asous' lap before a family meal, an Israeli sniper fired through the second-floor window of the family home. The bullet hit Layla in the skull.
Blood trickled down Layla's head and onto Asous’ hijab.
While world watches Gaza, here is what’s happening in West BankLayla's grandfather grabbed her limp body and ran downstairs, calling for help, as Asous followed in a daze. Four military jeeps were parked outside.
Asous approached the soldiers. She remembers one looked at her and said, “I am sorry.”
Asous says Layla was still breathing when the ambulance arrived, but died on the way to the hospital.
The military said it is still investigating Layla’s case and could not give further details.
European Union urges Israel to drop West Bank building plan Saddam (10)Saddam Rajab lived with his father, Iyad, in a studio apartment in the restive city of Tulkarem.
The two had a special relationship — Saddam was Iyad's firstborn, the eldest of four. When Iyad was hospitalised with leg injuries, Saddam visited him constantly.
On the evening of 28 January, the two were sitting on the roof with friends. Saddam asked for his father’s phone and took it downstairs, stepping outside.
Security camera footage obtained by AP shows what happened next: The boy, standing on the sidewalk with phone in hand, sees something off camera, turns and shots ring out. Saddam falls to the ground, screams “Mama!” and writhes in pain. Struggling on crutches, his father pulls Saddam by the collar of his sweater, leaving behind one of the boy's sneakers — and a bloodstain.
The 10-year-old died from his injuries 10 days later.
The military said investigation findings in the case were submitted to the military Advocate General, which decides whether to file charges. But it didn’t specify their findings.
Did top IDF general resign amid massive West Bank ops because his job was ‘done’? Amer (14)Amer Rabee, an American Palestinian teenager born in New Jersey, was killed on a West Bank hilltop in his village of Turmus Ayya. He was picking almonds with friends on April 6, when Israeli soldiers shot him, his father, Mohammed, says.
A security camera in Turmus Ayya, where the population is mostly Palestinian American, captured the sound of 36 gunshots. Amer was killed, his two friends injured.
After Amer died, soldiers stripped off his clothes, put his body in a blue bag and brought it to a military base. Mohammed later opened the bag and identified his body, pockmarked with bullets.
The military declined to say whether the investigation into Amer's death had concluded. It said its forces had opened fire on “three terrorists”, who it said were throwing stones at a highway and endangering civilians.
Grainy video footage released by the military shows three people, including one who appears to throw something. The video is not timestamped.
A US state department spokesperson said further investigation was needed to determine what happened.
Who are the Palestinian prisoners released in exchange for Israeli hostages? Ayman (12)Anwar al-Heimouni, 29, says her son Ayman’s last words to her as he died were, “Mama, they shot me.”
In events captured by two security cameras, Ayman stepped outside his grandfather's house in Hebron before being shot.
In the footage, three soldiers come up the alley to the house's driveway and appear to spot Ayman’s body.
They retreat without offering him aid, joining three other soldiers at the street's end.
The family gathers around Ayman and relatives carry his body down the street behind the withdrawing soldiers. He died 21 February.
Al-Heimouni and her husband, who works in security for the Palestinian Authority, have three other children: Ayem, 3; Tia Lara, 5; and Aysar, 10.
The kids all wear pendants emblazoned with Ayman's face. His mother keeps his bed made, as if he might return at any point.
Military police are investigating Ayman’s case, the military said, but it could not give further details.
Rimas (13)Israelis are trying to burn down as many homes as they can while children sleep inside..
— ADAM (@AdameMedia) August 16, 2024
This is just daily life in the West Bank.
A life they’re told to just accept.
Resistance is antisemitic. pic.twitter.com/EZBv3aPSyJ
It was 21 February — Day 32 of Israel's military operation in the Jenin refugee camp — and Rimas Amouri wanted to play outside, despite her mother’s protests.
Within seconds of stepping outside, gunshots sounded and there was yelling, her mother Rudeina says. Rimas had been shot in the back.
“I was screaming, ‘Please calm down, calm down.’ Then they started shooting at me,” Rudeina said.
Ten soldiers surrounded the house, she says, shooting from about 25 metres (yards) away every time she tried to run to her daughter. After 30 minutes, it was too late.
“I came closer and lifted her up. Her face had turned yellow,” Rudeina said. “I knew she was gone.”
Rimas’ father, Omar, says they “needed a special permit from the Israelis” to enter the graveyard and bury her.
Military police are investigating Rimas’ case, the military said, but it could not provide further details.
World’s first war on children: Watch first-person account from Gaza Ahmad (14)The Jazar family celebrated Ramadan this year with one person missing.
Ahmad, who wanted to become an interior designer, was shot by Israeli forces in his hometown, Sebastia, on 19 January.
Neither of his parents was present when he was shot. Neither knows why he was killed.
“I don't let my young ones run in the street alone any more,” his mother, Wafa, said. “I wait at the door whenever they go out, waiting until they are home again.”
Military police are investigating Ahmad's case, the military said, but it could not provide further details.
Mahmoud (14)A group of men was huddled outside the Gharbieh house in the Jenin refugee camp on 14 January, eating sweets.
It was late and cold, remembers Ashraf Gharbieh, the lone survivor of that night.
His son Mahmoud stood up and headed inside to get a spoon. There was a flash of light. The first missile landed. The next came seconds later. Then a third.
Six people died. The elder Gharbieh was left with hearing damage.
The military said the airstrike killed several militants and that it was “aware of claims” that an uninvolved civilian was harmed. It did not say whether it was investigating Mahmoud's death.
Of his son, Gharbieh says, “I wanted to die with him.”
Children in the West Bank are facing incredible hardship while living amid fear and violence.
— UNICEF (@UNICEF) February 22, 2025
Watch for more information and join us in calling for peace for them. pic.twitter.com/tEkRZwNfcg
You may also like
Bihar elections 2025: The key players and what's at stake for them?
Andy Burnham says Westminster has 'completely failed' on two major things
Bomb threat to Tirupati's Sri Venkateswara University
Cong targets Dy CM over health crisis in MP's Chhindwara
Lewis Hamilton admits pain as Ferrari 'can't match' F1 rivals in glum verdict