US lawmaker condemns conditions in West Bank after brief detention by armed Israeli occupiers

US Representative Ro Khanna described "deeply inhumane" conditions in the occupied West Bank after being detained by Israeli occupiers, highlighting disparities in water access, unchecked violence against Palestinians, and a system he likened to Jim Crow-era segregation.

US Representative Ro Khanna has said he witnessed what he described as "deeply inhumane" conditions in the occupied West Bank, following an encounter in which armed Israeli occupiers detained him after Israeli soldiers helped them block his vehicle.

Khanna said in a video posted on the US social media company X on Saturday that the incident was frightening but underlined that his strongest reaction came from hearing the experiences of Palestinian and Palestinian American families.

"I was just so emotionally moved as a human being, not as a politician," he said.

Among those he met was a father whose 14-year-old son, an American citizen, had been killed by the Israeli army, according to Khanna.

The father broke down while explaining that he had left his son's bedroom unchanged because of his grief.

Khanna also described severe disparities in access to water.

He said some Palestinian families lacked enough water to wash clothes or flush toilets, while nearby Israeli occupiers received several times more.

At a school, Khanna spoke with a principal who recounted the killing of a student in a shooting.

The principal said he was unaware of any investigation and had not been contacted by either the police or the Israeli army.

Khanna said shopkeepers in Hebron told him that they faced repeated abuse from occupiers living above their businesses, including urine, rotten vegetables, and acid being thrown down toward them.

He also pointed to the separate systems governing movement in the West Bank, including different license plates and checkpoints for Israeli occupiers and Palestinians.

One Palestinian American man told Khanna that guards at a checkpoint beat him and took his money because he did not speak Hebrew.

The man said he had lived outside Palestine for years and was unable to communicate with the guards.

Khanna compared the system he observed to segregation in the Jim Crow-era American South.

"It doesn't really matter what your ideology is," he said.

"What is happening in the West Bank is just inhumane. No human being would tolerate it."

Khanna said he intended to use his public platform to amplify the experiences of Palestinians and Palestinian Americans who do not have the same access to political or media attention.

"We need to stand up for human dignity," he said.

"We need to tell the stories of what's happening to Palestinians and Palestinian Americans in the West Bank."

Khanna said he planned to continue speaking about the issue in the coming days and weeks.



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