Al-Haroub was shot and killed at the scene of the attack. His home in Dir Samet, south of Hebron, was demolished by IDF forces last February.
Ahmed was accompanied on his visit by Mohammad al-Qiq, a Hamas activist who conducted a three-month long hunger strike—and was later released—in protest of his administrative detention.
The arson attack was carried out in late July last year by three masked men who threw Molotov cocktails at two homes which were situated at the edge of Duma. One home was empty at the time of the attack, while the Dawabsheh family was asleep in the second home. The parents Reham and Saad woke up to the fire and attempted to get their children—18 month-old Ali and 5 year-old Ahmed—out of the house.
Ali and both of his parents perished in the fire, leaving Ahmed, aged 6, the sole survivor of the attack. Ahmed was released from Tel Hashomer hospital only last month.
Six months after the attack, Amiram Ben-Uliel was charged with murder and a hate crime. The indictment revealed that the attack was planned in retaliation for the murder of Malachi Rosenfeld.
Ben-Uliel, the 21 year-old Jerusalem resident and father, is a known acquaintance of Meir Ettinger. Ettinger is the grandson of Rabbi Meir Kahane and is described by the Shin Bet as the leader of the organization the "Revolt," which has been behind a string of Jewish terror attacks.