Oscar-winning Palestinian director released by Israeli forces in West Bank
The filmmaker Hamdan Ballal was one of three Palestinians detained in the village of Susiya, according to attorney Lea Tsemel, who is representing them.
PTI
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Ballal and Adra, both from Masafar Yatta, made the joint Palestinian-Israeli production with Israeli directors Yuval Abraham and Rachel Szor
HEBRON, 25 MAR
An Oscar-winning Palestinian director and two others have been
released by Israel, a day after he was badly beaten by Jewish settlers and
detained by Israeli forces in the occupied West Bank.
Associated
Press journalists on Tuesday saw Hamdan Ballal and the two other Palestinians
leaving the police station in the West Bank settlement of Kiryat Arba where
they were being held. Ballal had bruises on his face and blood on his clothes.
Israeli settlers beat up the Palestinian co-directors of the Oscar-winning documentary film “No Other Land” on Monday in the occupied West Bank before he was detained by the Israeli military, according to two of his fellow directors and other witnesses.
The filmmaker Hamdan
Ballal was one of three Palestinians detained in the village of Susiya,
according to attorney Lea Tsemel, who is representing them. Police told her
they were being held at a military base for medical treatment, but she said on
Tuesday morning that she had not been able to reach them and had no further
information on their whereabouts.
Basel Adra, another
co-director, witnessed the detention and said around two dozen settlers — some
masked, some carrying guns, some in Israeli uniform — attacked the village.
Soldiers who arrived pointed their guns at the Palestinians, while settlers
continued throwing stones.
“We came back from
the Oscars and every day since there is an attack on us,” Adra told The
Associated Press. “This might be their revenge on us for making the movie. It
feels like a punishment.”
The Israeli military
said it detained three Palestinians suspected of hurling rocks at forces and
one Israeli civilian involved in a “violent confrontation” between Israelis and
Palestinians — a claim witnesses interviewed by the AP disputed. The military
said it had transferred them to Israeli police for questioning and had
evacuated an Israeli citizen from the area to receive medical treatment.
“No Other Land,”
which won the Oscar this year for best documentary, chronicles the struggle by
residents of the Masafer Yatta area to stop the Israeli military from
demolishing their villages. Ballal and Adra, both from Masafar Yatta, made the
joint Palestinian-Israeli production with Israeli directors Yuval Abraham and
Rachel Szor.
The film has won a
string of international awards, starting at the Berlin International Film
Festival in 2024. It has also drawn ire in Israel and abroad, as when Miami
Beach proposed ending the lease of a movie theatre that screened the
documentary.
Adra said that
settlers entered the village Monday evening shortly after residents broke the
daily fast for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. A settler — who according to
Adra frequently attacks the village — walked over to Ballal's home with the
military, and soldiers shot in the air. Ballal's wife heard her husband being
beaten outside and scream “I'm dying,” according to Adra.
Adra then saw the
soldiers lead Ballal, handcuffed and blindfolded, from his home into a military
vehicle. Speaking to the AP by phone, he said Ballal's blood was still
splattered on the ground outside his own front door.
Some of the details
of Adra's account were backed up by another eyewitness, who spoke on condition
of anonymity out of fear of reprisal.
A group of 10-20
masked settlers with stones and sticks also assaulted activists with the Center
for Jewish Nonviolence, smashing their car windows and slashing tires to make
them flee the area, one of the activists at the scene, Josh Kimelman, told the
AP.
Video provided by the
Center for Jewish Nonviolence showed a masked settler shoving and swinging his
fists at two activists in a dusty field at night. The activists rush back to
their car as rocks can be heard thudding against the vehicle.
Israel captured the
West Bank in the 1967 Mideast war, along with the Gaza Strip and east
Jerusalem. The Palestinians want all three for their future state and view
settlement growth as a major obstacle to a two-state solution.
Israel has built well
over 100 settlements, home to over 500,000 settlers who have Israeli
citizenship. The 3 million Palestinians in the West Bank live under seemingly
open-ended Israeli military rule, with the Western-backed Palestinian Authority
administering population centres.
The Israeli military
designated Masafer Yatta in the southern West Bank as a live-fire training zone
in the 1980s and ordered residents, mostly Arab Bedouin, to be expelled. Around
1,000 residents have largely remained in place, but soldiers regularly move in
to demolish homes, tents, water tanks and olive orchards — and Palestinians
fear outright expulsion could come at any time.
During the war in
Gaza, Israel has killed hundreds of Palestinians in the West Bank during
wide-scale military operations, and there has also been a rise in settler
attacks on Palestinians. There has been a surge in Palestinian attacks on
Israelis.
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