Palestinian behind Oscar-winning documentary arrested by Israeli army — co-director

Palestinian behind Oscar-winning documentary arrested by Israeli army — co-director
Basel Adra, Rachel Szor, Hamdan Ballal and Yuval Abraham pose with the Oscar for Best Documentary Feature Film for “No Other Land” in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California. (File/Reuters)
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Updated 25 March 2025

Palestinian behind Oscar-winning documentary arrested by Israeli army — co-director

Palestinian behind Oscar-winning documentary arrested by Israeli army — co-director
  • Dozens of settlers attacked the Palestinian village of Susiya in the Masafer Yatta area, destroying property
  • They attacked Hamdan Ballal, one of the documentary’s co-directors, leaving his head bleeding, the activists said

JERUSALEM: Israeli settlers beat up one of 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 Leah Tsemmel. Police told her they’re being held at a military base for medical treatment and she said she hasn’t been able to speak with them.
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 theater 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 centers.
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.


Protests force prison transfer of UK woman held in Iran

Protests force prison transfer of UK woman held in Iran
Updated 4 sec ago

Protests force prison transfer of UK woman held in Iran

Protests force prison transfer of UK woman held in Iran
  • Lindsay and Craig Foreman have been held since January as they passed through Kerman, in central Iran, while on a round-the-world motorbike trip

LONDON: A British woman held in Iran on spying charges has been moved into the same prison as her husband after protests reportedly flared in her women’s jail, her family said Tuesday.
Lindsay and Craig Foreman, both 52, have been held since January after Iranian authorities seized the couple as they passed through Kerman, in central Iran, while on a round-the-world motorbike trip.
Lindsay Foreman was transferred last week from Qarchak women’s prison to Evin prison in Tehran, where her husband Craig is also detained, the family said in a statement sent to AFP.
They were told of the move by the couple’s state-appointed lawyer in Tehran.
While the family said it was “relieved” that Lindsay Foreman had left Qarchak, it noted Evin remains “one of the most notorious prisons in the world. We cannot let slight relief turn into complacency.”
The couple’s son Joe Bennett said the family had been “sick with worry” over reports of the treatment of prisoners in Qarchak.
Iran Human Rights, a Norway-based NGO, said in late September that 19 women had gone on hunger strike “due to serious problems with illness and access to medical care” in the prison.
And the New York-based Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI) said three women had died there through lack of medical care.
Human rights groups have repeatedly criticized the prison’s reportedly dire conditions.
“Mum being moved to Evin might mean a little more access, maybe a phone call, maybe slightly better treatment, but this doesn’t change the bigger picture,” Bennett said.
“She is still an innocent British woman, wrongfully imprisoned in Iran.”
Relatives only spoke to the pair for the first time in early August and have grown increasingly frustrated at the handling of their case.
The couple is still waiting to hear their verdict after they appeared in court on September 27 on the spying charges.
Bennett said the family was due to meet Foreign Minister Yvette Cooper on Thursday.
“We need a clear plan from the UK government. They cannot allow this to drift any longer,” Bennett said.


Israel army says four returned hostage bodies identified

Israel army says four returned hostage bodies identified
Updated 51 min 25 sec ago

Israel army says four returned hostage bodies identified

Israel army says four returned hostage bodies identified
  • Hamas still holds the remains of 24 deceased hostages, which it has agreed to return to Israel

JERUSALEM: The Israeli military said Tuesday that the bodies of four hostages returned by Hamas have been identified, including that of a Nepalese student.

In a statement, the military named two of the victims as Guy Iluz, an Israeli national, and Bipin Joshi, an agriculture student from Nepal.

The names of the other two hostages have not yet been released at the request of their families, the statement added.

Iluz, who was 26 at the time of the attack, had been attending the Nova music festival when Hamas-led militants launched their assault on October 7, 2023.

He reportedly tried to flee the site in a jeep and later hid in a tree, from where he made his last contact with his parents before being captured and taken to the Gaza Strip.

The military said Iluz was injured and abducted alive by militants but later died of his injuries due to lack of medical treatment while in captivity.

It did not specify when he actually died, though his death was announced in December 2023.

Iluz had worked as a sound technician for famous Israeli musicians.

Joshi, who was 22 at the time of the attack, was part of a Nepalese agricultural training group that had arrived in Israel three weeks before the Hamas assault.

He was abducted from Kibbutz Alumim and was photographed sheltering with Thai workers shortly before militants reached the area.

“It is assessed that he was murdered in captivity during the first months of the war,” the military said.

‘We will not rest’

Joshi’s Nepalese friend Himanchal Kattel, the group’s only survivor, said that the attackers had thrown a grenade into the shelter, which Joshi caught and threw away before it exploded, saving Kattel’s life.

“The return of Guy and Bipin … brings some measure of comfort to families who have lived with agonizing uncertainty and doubt for over two years,” said the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, the main Israeli group campaigning for the release of all hostages.

“We will not rest until all 24 hostages are brought home,” it said in a statement.

The four bodies were returned by Hamas on Monday, following the release of all 20 surviving captives as part of a ceasefire deal brokered by US President Donald Trump.

Palestinian militants are still holding the bodies of 24 hostages, which are expected to be returned under the terms of the ceasefire agreement.


UN says states willing to fund Gaza’s $70 billion rebuild

UN says states willing to fund Gaza’s $70 billion rebuild
Updated 14 October 2025

UN says states willing to fund Gaza’s $70 billion rebuild

UN says states willing to fund Gaza’s $70 billion rebuild

ANKARA/GENEVA: There are promising early indications from countries, including the United States as well as Arab and European states, about their willingness to contribute to the $70 billion cost of rebuilding Gaza, a United Nations Development Programme official said on Tuesday.

“We’ve had very good indications already,” UNDP’s Jaco Cilliers told reporters at a press conference in Geneva, without giving details. He estimated that the two-year Israel-Hamas war had generated at least 55 million tonnes of rubble.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan earlier said he will seek the support of Gulf states, the United States and Europe for the reconstruction of Gaza under the new ceasefire deal, and he believed project financing will be provided swiftly.

Speaking to reporters on a return flight from Sharm El-Sheikh, Erdogan said Western countries’ decisions to recognize the Palestinian state should be seen as building blocks of a two-state solution, according to a transcript shared by his office on Tuesday.


Israel says it opens fire on suspects in Gaza, local authorities report six killed

Israel says it opens fire on suspects in Gaza, local authorities report six killed
Updated 14 October 2025

Israel says it opens fire on suspects in Gaza, local authorities report six killed

Israel says it opens fire on suspects in Gaza, local authorities report six killed
  • The military said the suspects had crossed a boundary for an initial Israeli pullback under a US-brokered ceasefire plan

Israel’s military said it opened fire on Tuesday to remove a threat posed by suspects who approached its forces in the northern Gaza Strip, and health authorities in the enclave said at least six Palestinians had been killed by Israeli fire.
The military said the suspects had crossed a boundary for an initial Israeli pullback under a US-brokered ceasefire plan, in a violation of the deal.
Gaza’s local health authority said the Israeli military killed six Palestinians in two separate incidents across the enclave on Tuesday.
On Monday, Hamas freed the last living Israeli hostages from Gaza and Israel sent home busloads of Palestinian detainees under the ceasefire deal, as US President Donald Trump declared the end of a two-year-long war that has upended the broader Middle East.


Trump says ‘will decide’ on solution to Mideast conflict

Trump says ‘will decide’ on solution to Mideast conflict
Updated 14 October 2025

Trump says ‘will decide’ on solution to Mideast conflict

Trump says ‘will decide’ on solution to Mideast conflict
  • Around three-quarters of the 193 UN member states recognize the Palestinian state proclaimed in 1988 by the exiled Palestinian leadership

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said Tuesday he “will decide what I think is right” on a long-term solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Trump made a brief visit to the Middle East to join regional leaders Monday in signing a declaration meant to cement a ceasefire in Gaza after two years of war.
Addressing the decades-long Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Trump noted “a lot of people like the one state solution, some people like the two state solutions. We’ll have to see.”
“I will decide what I think is right, but I’d be in coordination with other states and other countries,” he told journalists aboard Air Force One.
Around three-quarters of the 193 UN member states recognize the Palestinian state proclaimed in 1988 by the exiled Palestinian leadership.
The United States, Israel’s closest ally, criticized the decision last month by allies including Britain and Canada to recognize Palestine as a state.