An 18-month-old Palestinian baby has died after suffering from tear gas inhalation during clashes between Israeli forces and Palestinians nearly three months ago, according to Palestinian health officials.
Abdul Rahman Barghouti died late on Friday from asphyxiation, following more than two months of treatment, Palestinian Ministry of Health spokesman Osama Najjar told Al Jazeera.
Najjar said that Barghouti was hospitalized after Israeli forces "shot tear gas into his home and room" in the occupied West Bank town of Aboud near Ramallah on May 19.
According to Palestinian news agency Wafa, clashes between Israeli forces and Palestinians took place during a protest in support of Palestinian prisoners who were on hunger strike at the time.
"Soldiers ... randomly fired a large volume of tear gas at civilian homes," Wafa said.
Najjar told Al Jazeera that Israeli jeeps blocked Palestinian ambulances from reaching Barghouti and medics had to go by foot to attend to and bring the child to a hospital in Ramallah.
Due to the seriousness of his injuries, Barghouti was transferred to Hadassah hospital in West Jerusalem. Hospital officials were not available for comment.
An Israeli army spokesman told Al Jazeera on Monday that a child "was brought from Aboud to Israel to receive medical treatment" at Haddassah Hospital on May 19.
"He was said to have been exposed to gast that risked his health. The child was treated and released from the hosptial after a week and a half", the spokesman said.
The spokesman added that on Friday, "the child was brought by his family to the settlement of Halmish with no pulse. A paramedic in the settlement determined his death once he arrived.
There is no known relationship between the two cases."
'Misuse' of crowd control weapons
According to Israeli human rights group B'Tselem, at least 101 Palestinians were killed by Israeli forces in 2016, including 31 children.
Rights group Defense for Children International - Palestine (DCIP) has documented at least nine Palestinian children who have been killed by Israeli forces or settlers so far this year.
Ayed Abu Eqtaish, accountability programme director at DCIP, told Al Jazeera that Israeli forces "continually misuse crowd control weapons" like tear gas.
He said the misuse of such weapons "is in violation of military regulations and international law".
In May, a six-year-old Palestinian child was seriously injured after a tear gas canister fired by Israeli forces hit him in the back of the head.
At the time, the DCIP said in a statement that "excessive use of 'less-lethal' weapons and projectiles in crowded areas where children are present poses serious risks to children, especially very young children".
The organization documented at least seven cases between January and May 20, 2017 in which Palestinian children were injured by crowd control weapons used by Israeli forces.
In 2015, an eight-month-old baby died from tear gas inhalation in a village near Bethlehem.
The baby suffocated after Israeli forces sprayed tear gas at Palestinians during clashes in Beit Fajjar.
In a separate incident in 2015, a 54-year-old Palestinian man died due to inhaling excessive tear gas fired by Israeli forces in the southern West Bank city of Hebron.
PHOTO CAPTION
Palestinian protesters hurl stones at Israeli troops following a protest in support of Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike in Israeli jails, in the West Bank village of Beita, near Nablus May 19, 2017. Reuters
Source: Aljazeera.com