โLives turned in a secondโ: Family of baby Sam, shot dead by Israel, grieve
Fahd Abu Haikal, 41, is still in shock at the sudden death of his seven-month-old son, who was shot dead by an Israeli soldier as he travelled through the occupied West Bank city of Hebron on Friday. Sam was in the backseat of a car with his mother Dania Salameh, 28, and his bro
Fahd Abu Haikal, 41, is still in shock at the sudden death of his seven-month-old son, who was shot dead by an Israeli soldier as he travelled through the occupied West Bank city of Hebron on Friday.
Sam was in the backseat of a car with his mother Dania Salameh, 28, and his brother Kinan, 11, as the father drove his mother, Ferial, 61, back to her home in Hebron, following a brief stay with the family in Bethlehem.
As they approached Tel Rumeida, a Hebron neighbourhood containing a large Israeli settlement where Ferial lives, a group of soldiers appeared out of the darkness.
Fahd stopped the car and raised his hands, but despite all attempts to make it clear they were not a threat, a soldier took aim and fired at the vehicle. A bullet pierced the windshield, went through Fahdโs hand, and hit Sam, who sat behind him, in the face. It killed him instantly.
The same bullet that killed Sam then travelled through his motherโs jaw, leaving a fragment lodged in Daniaโs body, close to her heart. Doctors decided not to remove the shrapnel, fearing an operation so close to a major artery would endanger her life.
Fahd called an ambulance, but with blood pouring from his wifeโs and sonโs bodies, he could wait no longer, so he flagged down a passing car and headed to the hospital. Due to Daniaโs critical condition, he waited a day before telling her that their son was dead.
โAfter seeing the injuries, the soldiers withdrew from the scene without offering any assistance or doing anything about it,โ Fahd told Al Jazeera. โWe were shot with intent to kill; the soldier who shot us was on the front left side [of the vehicle].โ
Fahd intends to file a case against the soldier who fired the fatal shot, but he has little hope of accountability, particularly after the steps taken by the army at the scene of the boyโs death.

