TikTok Genocide
"On April 17, 2025, armed settlers entered Sheikh Sa’id al-‘Amur’s land in Masafer Yatta and began setting up poles. When Sa’id tried to protect his son Elias, who was filming them, a settler shot him at point-blank range, seriously injuring his leg. While bleeding, Sa’id was arrested and Elias was taken to Ofer Prison. Still in custody, doctors amputated Sa’id’s leg due to his injury. Sa’id and his son were later released after posting bail. Full report on our site >> https://www.btselem.org/node/217081" - Source
"On Thursday, 17 April 2025, at around 6:00 P.M., four armed settlers including the security coordinator of the Avigayil settlement arrived at the edge of a plot belonging to Sa’id al-'Amur (Raba’), known as Sheikh Sa’id, 59, from Khirbet a-Rakeez in Masafer Yatta in the South Hebron Hills, and began erecting poles nearby and running eruv lines through his land. When Raba’ noticed them, he set out of his home with three of his children to try to drive them away. One of the settlers attacked his son Elias (16), who was filming the incident on his phone, and tried to snatch the device from him. Raba’ tried to protect his son, at which point the settlers attacked him and the security coordinator fired two shots into the air. When Raba’ managed to break loose, the settler shot him at point-blank range, seriously wounding his leg., and fired two shots into the air. When Raba’ managed to break loose, the settler shot him at point-blank range, seriously wounding his leg.
Soldiers arrived at the scene, treated the father, arrested him, and took him in an Israeli ambulance to Soroka Hospital in Beersheba, where he underwent two surgeries. In the second surgery, the physicians amputated his leg above the knee.
Sheikh Sa’id and his son Elias after the shooting. Photo courtesy of the family Sheikh Sa’id and his son Elias after the shooting. Photo courtesy of the family On the morning after the amputation, 19 April 2025, police officers arrived at the hospital and questioned Raba’ on suspicion of assaulting soldiers. In a military court hearing the following day, Raba’ and his son Elias were ordered released on bail. Elias had been arrested immediately after the incident and taken to the police station in Kiryat Arba, where he was questioned on suspicion of attempting to snatch a weapon. From there, he was taken to Ofer Prison.
On the day after the hearing, after bail of 5,000 NIS (~ USD 1,480) was posted for each of the two, Raba’ was taken from the hospital by members of the Nahshon prison transport unit, with his hands tied, to the Meitar Checkpoint, where he was released. A Palestinian Red Crescent ambulance transported him from the checkpoint to al-Ahli Hospital in Hebron. His son was also released that day.
Sa’id al-'Amur (Raba’), 59, a father of 12 from Khirbet a-Rakeez in Masafer Yatta, South Hebron Hills, spoke about the incident in a testimony he gave B’Tselem field researcher Manal al-Ja’bari on 22 April 2025:
Sheikh Sa’id in hospital in Hebron after his leg was amputated. Photo: Manal al-Ja’bari, B’Tselem Sheikh Sa’id in hospital in Hebron after his leg was amputated. Photo: Manal al-Ja’bari, B’Tselem I live with my family in the community of a-Rakeez. I have 12 children, and 11 of them, who are between the ages of five and 23, live with me.
After 7 October 2023, a settler outpost was established about three kilometers away from our house, on Palestinian lands.
I have a three-dunam olive grove (1 dunam = 1,000 sq. meters) in the a-Rakeez area. Before the outpost was established, my family and I worked the land and harvested the olives without any problems. But the situation changed when settlers started wandering around my land, grazing their flock and attacking my family members whenever they came across them there. All this happened in front of soldiers and police officers, who escort them and keep watch while they graze.
On Thursday, 17 April 2025, at around 6:00 P.M., I saw a vehicle with Israeli license plates pulling over on the main road. Four armed settlers got out, one of the security coordinator of the Avigayil settlement whom we recognize because he often provokes residents. I saw them lay out an electric cable and connect it to a portable generator. They started laying cables across my land.
I went out of the house and quickly headed there. My son Elias, 16, followed me and tried to record what was happening on his mobile phone. When we reached the settlers, I shouted at them to get off my land. Then, one of the settlers grabbed Elias by the neck and tried to take his phone. I went closer to try and get the settler away from Elias , and then the settlers continued to attack us and the security coordinator fired two shots in the air. I managed to break loose, and then he fired another shot that hit my right leg just below the knee, at point-blank range. Earlier, my two daughters, ‘Aishah, 21, and Asia, Elias’s twin, had arrived, and Asia documented what was happening on her phone.
I collapsed to the ground, bleeding heavily. I lifted my leg to try to stop the bleeding, and meanwhile, soldiers arrived. My vision started to blur, and I felt disoriented and gradually lost consciousness. I heard my daughters’ screaming, and the settlers and foreign activists speaking in English, but I couldn’t make out what was happening around me, and then I blacked out.
When I came to, I found myself in the hospital. I was told by the doctors that I was at Soroka Hospital, and they asked me to sign a consent form for surgery. It was late at night. I don’t know exactly what time. I only fully woke up on Sunday morning, and then the doctors told me they had amputated my right leg, 10 centimeters above the knee, because they couldn’t stop the bleeding.
That morning, at around 7:00 A.M., Nahshon Unit (prison transport unit) officers from the Israel Prison Service handcuffed me without showing any mercy or compassion and put me in a wheelchair. They loaded me onto a “posta” (a prisoner transport bus) and made me sit on the metal seat of the bus, in a position that was very painful for me. My injured leg hurt terribly, and I suffered from the intense heat inside the vehicle, which had no windows.
The posta took me to the Meitar Crossing, where I was transferred to a Palestinian ambulance that drove me to al-Ahli Hospital. I’m still in the hospital. They gave me initial treatment and ran tests and scans. They gave me painkillers and antibiotics.
Later, I found out that Elias was also arrested, and that both of us were released after posting bail in the sum of 10,000 NIS (~ USD 2,970).
Elias Sa’id al-'Amur (Raba’), 16, Sa’id’s son, recounted:
On Thursday, 17 April 2025, around 6:00 P.M., while I was watering vegetables near the house, I heard some noise and my father saying a few words in Hebrew. I stopped watering and went toward him. I saw three settlers, two of them armed with M-16 rifles, and a vehicle with a trailer that stopped near our house. A cable was running from it into our land.
My father and I went over to the settlers. We saw that they had an electric drill, which they were using to drill into the ground to install metal poles. My father protested their presence and asked them to leave our land. He went up to one of them, whom I know, and the settler started pushing him. Just then, another settler came from behind, grabbed me, threw me onto the ground, and choked me with his arm while pressing his leg against my back.
I heard two shots and then the settler let go of my neck. I saw the settler I know aiming his M-16 rifle at my father and shooting him in the leg. I heard my father scream in pain. Then, that settler opened his phone, went up to my father, and started filming him. He spoke to him in Hebrew. I didn’t understand the words. My father said to him: “You killed me.” Then the settler turned the camera on me and came closer. He kicked sand at me and said a few more words to me in Hebrew that I didn’t understand.
At that point, soldiers arrived. They tied a tourniquet around my father’s thigh. One of them asked the settler to get away from me, and they told me to help my father. I held my father’s hand. A Red Crescent volunteer came and tried to stop the bleeding. Then an Israeli Magen David Adom ambulance arrived and took my father. A soldier who spoke Arabic ordered me to sit and stay put, and I did.
Afterwards, soldiers took me to a military jeep parked near the road to the outpost. Every settler who passed by said, “That’s it, Sa’id is dead.” The soldiers tied my hands behind my back, blindfolded me, and put me in the jeep. After about half an hour, they took me out of the jeep and handed me over to the police. After about five minutes, a police car took me for interrogation at the Kiryat Arba police station. They put me in a prefab, put iron leg cuffs on me, and I waited there until midnight.
Before the interrogation, I spoke with a lawyer who gave me legal advice. During the interrogation, I was accused of trying to grab a weapon and of my father throwing a stone. I denied all the accusations. After the interrogation, the soldiers took me to a military camp in Susiya, where I stayed until the morning. Then I was transferred to Ofer prison, where I was treated very badly. After three days, I was released after we posted 5,000 NIS (~ USD 1,480) bail."
April 17, 2025 (around 6:30 p.m.):
16-year-old Ilyas Saeed Rabaa sees three armed Israeli settlers setting up iron pillars on his family’s farmland in Al-Rakeez, cultivated since 2012.
Ilyas and his father, Sheikh Saeed Rabaa (60) (also called Saeed Al-Amour by the press and the activists), confront them.
One settler (identified as a local outpost security guard) attacks Ilyas, seizes his phone, and chokes him.
Saeed is shot in the leg by the settler after trying to help his son.
Saeed collapses and bleeds heavily. Israeli soldiers prevent an ambulance and neighbors from assisting.
Later that evening:
Soldiers detain Ilyas, blindfold and shackle him, and accuse him of trying to seize the settler's weapon.
He is held for a full day outside, given only stale bread, and later transferred to Ofer Prison.
Saeed is hospitalized at Soroka Medical Center (Be’er Sheva).
His right leg is amputated above the thigh.
Despite being shot and hospitalized, he remains handcuffed to his bed.
April 20, 2025:
Both Saeed (via medical escort) and Ilyas (via video link) appear before an Israeli military judge.
The court orders their release on bail (NIS 5,000 each).
Israeli authorities delay Saeed's release, citing lack of an entry permit — even though Israeli forces brought him into Israel.
April 21, 2025:
On April 17, 2025, dozen of settlers attaked the hamel of Al-Rakeez. Saeed Al-Amour, a 60-year-old Palestinian near the village of At-Tuwani in Masafer Yatta (southern Hebron), was shot in the leg by the Israeli settler Binyamin Bodenheimer (the security coordinator of the Avigail settlement) while Sheik Saeed Al-Amour working on his land.
Saeed was left bleeding on the ground for an extended period, denied immediate medical care. The delay led to a failed surgery and ultimately the amputation of his leg.
Saeed’s 15-year-old son, who was attacked alongside him, was abducted from the scene after his father was shot and has since been held at the Israeli Ofer detention camp.
Binyamin Bodenheimer—the settler who shot Saeed—is the security coordinator of the settlement of Avigail. As the person responsible for the settlement’s security, he is deeply committed to acting in the settlement’s interests, which means to the harm of his Palestinian neighbors. His activities include, among other things, expelling shepherds from their lands, harassing residents who are under threat of expulsion, and invading villages with youths from the settlement.
Aftermath
The 15 year-old son of Saeed, Elyas, remains in Israeli detention. The settler who shot Saeed has not been arrested or even questioned. In fact the settler returned tor Khirbet AL-Rakeez with Israeli forces. He has the soldiers there at his directive to make sure he is able to dig on the same land where he opened fire. Attempting to claim the land for his own.
He showed he wants to continue tormenting Saeed’s family, who are still processing the trauma and the new reality. Maybe he wanted to remind them that he’s there, that he’s free, and that he can keep harming them — under the support and protection of the apartheid regime.
Saeed is now under medical supervision, paying the price of a system that protects settlers and punishes the victims.
AccordinG to masafering on April 20 :
"We have full names of the attackers. Today, while Sheikh Saeed lies in the hospital with his leg amputated after being shot on Thursday by a settler, a hearing was held on the matter at the military court of the apartheid regime. However, the suspects are not the settlers who attacked Saeed and his son, but the victims themselves. Saeed was detained as a prisoner at Soroka Hospital and was not allowed to receive visitors or see his relatives or family members.
On April 20, the court decided to release Saeed and his son from detention, demanding 10,000 shekels for their release. Due to technical reasons, the release will be delayed and will only take place tomorrow. Many complaints have been filed against the perpetrator, Benyamin Bodenheimer with the police, along with documentation proving the allegations, but the police, of course, are unfazed. Those belonging to the “superior race” are exempt from the law. Even when Bodenheimer shot Saeed, he was not required to appear for questioning (as far as is known). As for his arrest—there is no question of that, while Saeed, who was shot by him, is held as a detainee in the hospital.
Today, Bodenheimer returned again to the area where the incident occurred, near Saeed’s home. Apparently, it was not enough for him, and he wants to continue making Saeed’s family’s life miserable as they are still processing the fresh trauma and new reality forced upon them. Apparently, the attacker also wanted to remind them that he is there at any given moment, that he is free and can continue to harm them as much as he wants, with the assistance and protection of the apartheid regime.
Shooter's name: Binyamin Bodenheimer His accomplice: Amihai Shilo"
Complaints were filed against Bodenheimer with the police, along with documented evidence supporting the claims — but, of course, the police are unfazed. Those belonging to the "superior race" are exempt from the law. Even after the shooting of Saeed, he was not required to appear for questioning (as far as we know). Not to mention arrest — while Saeed, who was shot by him, is detained in the hospital.
On April 21, Israeli forces released Saeed Al-Amour and he comes back to his house by ambulance. His son, Eliya, was released sooner in the same day.
On April 22, Israeli forces launched another demolition operation in Masafer Yatta, destroying two residential homes in the village of Tuwani, belonging to the Al-Amour family—relatives of Sheikh Saeed from the nearby village of Al-Rakeez. Four adults and five children have been left homeless. This operation can be understand as a retaliation or a taregted harassement against this family in order to stela their land.
The attack occurred near the Avigayil outpost, officially legalized by Israel in September 2023. Avigayil has been expanding and threatens nearby Palestinian communities like Al-Rakeez, al-Mufaqara, and Shaab al-Butum. Settler violence and military restrictions have intensified in Masafer Yatta, especially after October 7, 2023. Local Palestinians report daily harassment, crop destruction, and land takeovers by settlers.
The details for each video come from social media. None of it has been verified.