Issa Amro
Issa Amro is a Palestinian activist residing in Hebron, West Bank, who co-founded Youth Against Settlements in 2007 as a grassroots initiative to counter Israeli settlement activities through documented nonviolent resistance and community protection efforts.[1][2]
Amro, an electrical engineer by training, has gained international acclaim for promoting Gandhian and King-inspired principles of civil disobedience amid the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, earning distinctions such as the 2025 Right Livelihood Award and a Nobel Peace Prize nomination for his role in documenting settler violence and fostering Palestinian steadfastness without endorsing armed struggle.[1][3][4]
His activism, centered in Hebron's tense H2 sector where Israeli settlers and military presence restrict Palestinian movement, has involved leading tours for journalists, organizing protests against settlement expansion, and discouraging youth participation in violent acts during escalations like the 2015 knife intifada.[5][6]
However, Amro has encountered repeated legal challenges, including convictions in Israeli military courts on charges such as assaulting security forces, obstructing soldiers, and holding unpermitted demonstrations—offenses stemming from confrontations dating back to 2010—which critics of his work portray as evidence of disruptive rather than purely pacific conduct.[7][6]
He has also faced prosecution under Palestinian Authority cybercrime laws for social media posts criticizing PA arrests, highlighting tensions with both governing entities.[8]