UPDATE - Qatar, Egypt condemn Israel's killing of Turkish-American activist near Nablus
Qatari foreign ministry warned that international community’s silence in face of Israeli crimes is 'incentive to commit more atrocities'
CHANGES HEADLINE, ADDS EGYPTIAN STATEMENT
By Ahmed Asmar
ANKARA (AA) - Qatar and Egypt condemned the murder of Turkish-American activist Aysenur Ezgi Eygi on Friday by Israeli forces in the northern occupied West Bank in separate statements.
Qatar's Foreign Ministry said the "heinous crime" against Eygi is in line with "the series of repeated brutal Israeli occupation crimes against the Palestinian cause and human rights."
It warned that "the silence of the international community in the face of these horrific violations is a renewed incentive for the occupation to commit more atrocities."
The Egyptian Foreign Ministry said the killing is "a new example of the Israeli daily violations against Palestinian civilians and solidarity activists."
It offered condolences to the Turkish government and people for the loss of Eygi.
The statement decried that the international community is facing an "unprecedented moral dilemma" due to the atrocities committed against the civilians in the occupied Palestinian territories.
The UN has demanded a "full investigation" and accountability for the killing in a protest against illegal Israeli settlements in the town of Beita.
Fouad Nafaa, the director of the Rafidia Hospital in Nablus, told Anadolu that Eygi arrived at the facility with a gunshot wound to the head. She died despite efforts by medical teams to revive her, according to Nafaa.
Witnesses reported that Israeli soldiers opened fire on a group of Palestinians participating in a demonstration condemning the illegal settlements on Mount Sbeih in Beita, which lies south of Nablus.
The official Palestinian news agency Wafa confirmed that the victim was a volunteer with the Fazaa campaign -- an initiative aimed at supporting and protecting Palestinian farmers from violations by illegal Israeli settlers and the military.
Beita residents hold protests after weekly Muslim Friday prayers in congregation to oppose the illegal Israeli settlement of Avitar, which sits atop Mount Sbeih. The community demands that the settlement be removed because it violates their land rights.
Eygi was born in the Turkish city of Antalya in 1998.
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