The news arrives with a terrible, simple clarity: a three-month-old Palestinian baby, shot in the head by Israeli fire during a military raid in the West Bank village of Zababdeh. Another name, barely spoken, now etched onto a scroll that grows too long for any ledger. The UK government has called for an independent inquiry, a diplomatic reflex that feels as inadequate as a bandage on a haemorrhage. But what stays with me, as a writer who watches these stories for the human cost, is not the politics but the unbearable weight of that single, small life.
This child was not a combatant, not a demographic data point, not a bargaining chip. She was a daughter, born into a world of checkpoints and tear gas and curfews, yet still breathing the same air as any other infant. The parents, I imagine, heard gunshots that night. Perhaps they hunched lower, hoping the noise would pass. Perhaps the mother pressed the baby closer, whispering a prayer in the dark. And then the bullet came through the wall. How does a family ever recover from that? How does a society?
The West Bank in 2025 is a place of constant attrition. Settlements expand, villages are squeezed, and the ever-present military patrols mean that death can arrive at any hour. This death feels different because it is so total. The child never learned to walk, never formed a sentence, never knew what it meant to be Palestinian or Israeli or anything at all. She existed only in the glow of a family's love, and then, in an instant, she was gone. The inquiry the UK demands will likely produce a report that collects dust in a Whitehall filing cabinet, while the occupations grind on, indifferent to ink and signatures.
But what of the soldiers? I think of them, too. Young men and women trained to see threats in shadows, to fire at suspicious movement. A baby in the middle of the night is a tragedy waiting to happen. The system that puts an armed 19-year-old opposite a family sleeping in their home is a system designed for catastrophic error. And so both sides lose: one a child, the other its humanity.
In the cafes of London or the living rooms of the UK, this story will be parsed as a political scandal, a proof of this or that ideology. But in the streets of Zababdeh, a mother now has to buy a tiny shroud. That is the human cost, the irreducible truth that no inquiry can ever restore. And as I write this, I wonder how many more children will have to die before we realise that the centre cannot hold, that the violence we accept as normal is actually a cultural shift towards the unbearable. We are learning to live with the death of babies. That is not progress. That is the sound of a world fracturing, one bullet at a time.









