6th of September, 2024: The Colonization and Wall Resistance Commission (CWRC) reported that American-Turkish activist, Aysenur Ezgi Eygi, 26 years old, was martyred due to bullet wounds shot at her by the Israeli occupation army on Mount Sabih in the Nablus Governorate during a peaceful protest. This crime adds to a series of crimes committed by the Israeli occupation state against the Palestinian people, those who stand in solidarity with them, and those who believe in the justice of their cause.
The head of the Commission, Mr Mo’ayyad Sha’ban, said that by targeting the foreign activist, the Israeli occupation wants to send a message of threat, through bullets and blood, to all those who want to stand in solidarity with the Palestinian cause or want to participate in activities to protect the Palestinian land and ward off colonizers’ militias attacks. Mr Sha’bam added that today’s assault cannot be separated from the attacks carried out by colonizers one month ago against a group of foreign supporters in the village of Qusra. Rather, it comes within the framework of the shared roles of terror and aggression carried out by the official establishment and the colonizers’ armed militia.
Sha’ban stressed, that today’s assault, confirm with no room for doubt, about the Israeli occupation state’s premeitated intention to target all popular activities and events. He also stated that today's event sends a message to all countries of the world about the bloody nature of this regime. Sha’ban also explained that the land protection activities in Beita on Mount Sabih, which was subjected to the heinous attack today, and all popular national activities in Kafr Qaddum, Qusra, Burin, Qaryut, Barqa, Al-Mughayyir, Turmus Ayya, Al-Makhrour, Beit Ummar, and Masafer Yatta, will continue their activities despite all the bloody threats, calling on the international community to abandon the shameful double standards it is adopting against the horrific crime committed on Palestinian land and to seriously move towards condemning and prosecuting the criminals of the occupation state.