Palestinians grieve for a father-to-be shot by Israeli troops the day his son was born

A poster announces the death of Nayef Samaro, 25, after he was killed during an Israeli military raid on Nablus in May.Ruth Sherlock/NPR hide caption NABLUS, West Bank — It was supposed to be the happiest day of Raghed al-Shami's life.
She was about to give birth to a baby boy.But instead of having her husband beside her for the arrival of their first child, Shami found herself kneeling over her husband's lifeless body for a last goodbye before being taken to the maternity ward.
Nayef Samaro had been on his way to meet her at the hospital when he was shot dead by an Israeli soldier.Samaro, 25, was killed during an Israeli military raid on May 3 on a busy shopping thoroughfare in Nablus.He is one of the 1,103 Palestinians, including 241 children, in the occupied West Bank that the United Nations says have been killed by Israeli settlers or security forces since the Hamas-led attack on Israel from Gaza on Oct.
7, 2023.It's part of an unprecedented increase in Israeli military operations and attacks in the West Bank for which the perpetrators are almost never prosecuted."We have seen that impunity is a given," Ajith Sunghay, head of the U.N.
Human Rights Office for the Occupied Palestinian Territory, told NPR."There is no accountability for violence by Israeli settlers or by the Israeli military."Samaro's family says on the day of the Israeli military raid on Nablus' old city, he was working at a restaurant and was shot as he left to go to the hospital where his wife would later give birth to their child.
Speaking with NPR from her bed in her mother's home in Nablus, where she was recovering from a cesarean section, Shami says the family is not focused on seeking to prosecute those responsible for Samaro's death through the Israeli courts because, she says, justice feels so out of reach."Everyone knows we are living under occupation," Shami...