The mother of one of the Palestinian college students shot on the street near the University of Vermont has no doubt that the men were targeted and says the shooting should absolutely be treated as a hate crime.

Three men, all 20 years old, were shot in Burlington on Saturday. They all speak in Arabic and wear keffiyah, a symbol of Palestinian nationalism, although one was not wearing one during the shooting.

Tamara Tamimi told NBC News on Thursday that her son Kinnan Abdalhamid and his friends, Hisham Awartani and Tahseen Ali Ahmad, had been out in the neighborhood many times in the days leading up to the shooting.

Read more on this story at NBCNews.com and watch “NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt” tonight at 6:30 p.m. ET/5:30 p.m. CT.

“Kinan started to think recently that perhaps the man had seen them before. He’s like, ‘It just doesn’t make any sense the way that he reacted.’ … It was a split second. But he looked at them, and then did a double take. And then he pulled out his pistol without any thought — without any words.”

“There is no doubt,” she said. “It just defies logic. Why else would it be? … If they were not wearing the keffiyah. … If they were not speaking Arabic.”

She said she would be disappointed if the violence was not treated as a hate crime. “It would be sorely disappointing only because the facts are so obvious,” Tamimi said.

 Jason J. Eaton, 48, has been charged in the shooting and has pleaded not guilty to three counts of second-degree attempted murder.

An attorney for Eaton, Margaret Jansch, told NBC News earlier this week it’d be “premature for us to speculate” on whether he could be potentially charged with a hate crime. 

The victims, who are longtime friends who graduated from the same school in the occupied West Bank and attending separate colleges in the U.S., told police they were walking near the University of Vermont campus when a white male they did not know emerged, pulled out a gun and opened fire.

Elizabeth Price told NBC News on Thursday that her son, Hisham Awartani, is paralyzed from the mid-torso downwards.

“He has what they call an incomplete spinal injury, which means that he can feel, but he can’t move the areas that are currently paralyzed,” Price said. “He is going into intensive rehab later this week, and we hope that that will help with his prognosis. … He’s resolute. He’s resilient.”

Awartani, a junior at Brown University in Rhode Island, was shot in the spine. Abdalhamid, a Haverford College student, was shot in the glute. Ali Ahmad, who was shot in the chest, is a student at Connecticut’s Trinity College.

Tamimi said her son is out of the hospital and doing well physically but struggling emotionally and having trouble eating and sleeping.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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