Israeli troops tied a wounded Palestinian to a military vehicle during a raid in the occupied West Bank city of Jenin, the army said on Sunday, admitting that soldiers had violated operational procedures.
Footage of the incident, which occurred on Saturday, has gone viral and shows a man strapped horizontally to the bonnet of a military jeep as it passes through a narrow alley.
Medics identified the Palestinian as Mujahid Raed Abbadi, 24, who told reporters that he lives in the Jenin refugee camp.
The military said a Palestinian man was wounded during a “counterterrorism operation” to arrest wanted suspects in the area of Wadi Burqin, between the town of Burqin and Jenin.
During an exchange of fire between troops and Palestinians in Burqin’s Jabriyat neighbourhood, a Palestinian was wounded and apprehended, the military said in a statement.
The statement referred to him as a “suspect,” but did not specify any accusations against Abbadi, who medics told reporters that he was being treated at Jenin’s Ibn Sina hospital, and not in Israeli custody.
The military said: “In violation of orders and standard operating procedures, the suspect was taken by the forces while tied on top of a vehicle.”
He was later transferred to the Palestinian Red Crescent for treatment, it said.
“The conduct of the forces in the video of the incident does not conform to the values of the IDF (military),” the statement said.
“The incident will be investigated and dealt with accordingly.”
Francesca Albanese, the United Nations special rapporteur on the rights situation in the Palestinian territories, suggested the troops were using Abbadi to shield themselves from gunfire.
“#HumanShielding in action”, Albanese wrote on social media platform X, sharing footage of the incident.
At the hospital, Abbadi said he was hit and wounded as he stepped out of his uncle’s house in Jabriyat.
“I tried to withdraw and get inside the house, but they started shooting”, hitting him in the hand, Abbadi told reporters in his hospital bed.
He said he fell to the ground in an area behind the military jeep and was hit once more, with a bullet penetrating his leg.
According to Abbadi, rescuers or medics were unable to reach him for more than two hours as he lay on the ground.
“I started crawling” trying to escape as fighting continued around him, he said, before the Israeli troops noticed him.
“When they (the soldiers) arrived they stomped on my head and hit my face, my injured leg and hand,” Abbadi recalled.
“They were laughing and playing while they hit me.”
The soldiers lifted him and threw him on the ground before tying him to the bonnet of the jeep, he said.