A 27-year-old Palestinian man, identified as Amir Mohammad Shnaran, was shot and killed by an Israeli settler in the Masafer Yatta region near Hebron on Saturday. According to the Palestinian Health Ministry and the WAFA news agency, Shnaran’s brother, Khaled, was also critically wounded in the same incident.
The shooting occurred in Khirbet Wadi Al-Rakhim, an area already reeling from what the United Nations describes as a “sharp and systematic” increase in displacement driven by settler violence.
The Israeli military (IDF) issued a statement claiming the shooter was a reserve soldier who responded to reports of “confrontations” between settlers and Palestinians. However, local witnesses and anti-settlement activists allege the attack was unprovoked, occurring while the brothers were near their family home.
A Week of Targeted Attacks on Families
The killing of Amir Shnaran is the latest in a string of lethal incidents targeting Palestinian family members this week. Just days ago, on Monday, March 2, two brothers, Mohammad and Faheem Mu’amar, were shot dead in their own garden in the village of Qaryut, near Nablus.

Witnesses in Qaryut say a settler used a bulldozer to provoke residents before opening fire with an assault rifle, hitting Mohammad in the head and Faheem in the pelvis.
While the Israeli military police have opened investigations into both the Monday and Saturday shootings, Palestinian rights groups point to a “climate of total impunity,” noting that arrests of settlers or soldiers in such cases remain exceedingly rare.
Systematic Displacement in Masafer Yatta
The region of Masafer Yatta has become a flashpoint for the broader conflict in the West Bank. Home to several hamlets, the area is under constant threat of demolition and forced transfer. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) has documented a record-breaking year of displacement in 2025, with over 1,700 Palestinians forced from their homes.
Some argue that the current focus on the U.S.-Israeli air war in Iran has provided a “window of opportunity” for extremist settler groups to accelerate land seizures in the West Bank.
With military checkpoints tightening and internal movement restricted, Palestinian villagers describe themselves as being trapped between an expanding settlement network and an increasingly militarized reserve force.














