The Palestinian Ministry of Health stated that Al-Jazeera reporter Shireen Abu Aqleh was hit by a live bullet and said that her condition was critical. A live shot also hit journalist Ali Al-Samoudi in the back, and his condition is stable.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas blamed the Israeli forces for the death of the Al-Jazeera correspondent. 

The Palestinian presidency stressed that the crime of executing journalist Abu Aqila and wounding journalist Ali al-Samudi is part of Israel's policy of targeting journalists to obscure the truth and commit crimes silently.

In turn, the Palestinian Public Prosecution said, "We have started investigation procedures into the crime of assassinating journalist Sherine Abu Aqleh through the International Crimes Prosecution, in preparation for referring her to the Office of the Prosecutor at the International Criminal Court."

The correspondent of "Al-Arabiya" and "Al-Hadath" stated that the journalist's colleague, Sherine Abu Aqleh, said an Israeli sniper targeted her.

Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said that "armed Palestinians" are "probably" responsible for killing a Palestinian journalist for Al-Jazeera, Shirin Abu Akleh, in the occupied West Bank.

In a statement, the Israeli army said that its forces opened fire in response to being subjected to "heavy fire" in Jenin, adding that "there is a possibility currently under investigation that Palestinian gunmen possibly wounded the two reporters."

Israeli army spokesman, Avichai Adraee, said that "indiscriminate shooting" by Palestinian gunmen today, Wednesday, in Jenin camp in the West Bank, led, according to preliminary estimates, to the killing of journalist Shirin Abu Aqleh, Al-Jazeera correspondent.

Andraee added on his Twitter account that Israel had offered to conduct a joint investigation into the killing of the Palestinian journalist.