No Other Land Director Hamdan Ballal Injured and Missing Following Attack

“Soldiers invaded the ambulance he called, and took him. No sign of him since.”

No Other Land Director Hamdan Ballal Injured and Missing Following Attack
Photo: Monika Skolimowska/picture alliance via Getty Images

Less than a month after No Other Land won the Oscar for Best Documentary Feature, Palestinian Hamdan Ballal — one of the film’s four directors — was injured in an attack by about 15 Israeli settlers on the village of Susiya in Masafer Yatta, the territory where the documentary was filmed, according to The Guardian. One of Ballal’s co-directors, Yuval Abraham, reported that Ballal was beaten and sustained injuries to his head and stomach. During his transport by ambulance, Ballal and another man were arrested by the Israeli army, and their whereabouts are unknown. Basel Adra, another one of No Other Land’s directors, tweeted that he is with Ballal’s young son in the aftermath of the violence.

“There were dozens of settlers together with the Israeli soldiers and they were threatening us with weapons. The police were there from the beginning and did not intervene. While the soldiers were pointing their weapons at us, the settlers started attacking the houses of the Palestinians,” Adra told The Guardian. “Hamdan tried to protect his family and the settlers attacked him. Soldiers started shooting in the air to prevent anyone to help Hamdan. He was shouting for help. They let the settlers attack him and then the army abducted him.” Previously, Adra reported his neighbors’ house was “stormed” on March 11, not long after the No Other Land team returned from the Academy Awards.

The settler violence in Masafer Yatta began around 6 p.m., according to a press release from the Centre for Jewish Nonviolence. Anna Lippman, who works with the CFJN, was on the scene about 15 minutes after the attacks began and filmed the violence as it unfolded. She tells Vulture that Ballal was attacked within his home and that the police were intent on arresting him rather than pursuing the settlers who made the attacks or helping those from the nonprofit whose cars were destroyed; the cause of Ballal’s arrest is still unknown. Not unlike the work shown in No Other Land, Lippman says that the Centre is one of many international groups documenting its villages. “We are here to leverage our privilege as internationals to mitigate violence and displacement against Palestinians in Masafer Yatta,” she says.

At the Academy Awards on March 2, Ballal said the film, which captures on-the-ground footage of Israeli settler and military violence in Masafer Yatta, “reflects the harsh reality that we have been enduring for decades and still resist, as we call on the world to take serious actions to stop the injustice.” Lippman echoes his sentiments. “Sharing this story and asking our politicians to demand action from Israel is an important way to pressure the state to release Hamdan,” she says. “Historically, international pressure has done a great deal to help the people of Masafer Yatta.”

“Palestinians in the village have been under physical attack by settlers almost daily,” Adra told The Guardian. “The settlers’ violence is increasing here. Maybe it’s a revenge for the movie and the Oscar.”

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