A Palestinian director of the Oscar-winning documentary No Other Land has been arrested by the Israeli army after masked settlers attacked his house.
According to five Jewish American activists who witnessed the attack, Hamdan Ballal, one of the four directors of the the film that documented the destruction of villages in the West Bank, was surrounded and attacked by a group of about 15 armed settlers in Susya in the Masafer Yatta area south of Hebron.
“They started throwing stones towards Palestinians and destroyed a water tank near Hamdan’s house,” said Joseph, of the activists from the Center for Jewish Nonviolence, who asked not use his full name for security reasons.
The witnesses said that a group of soldiers arrived at the scene alongside other settlers dressed in military uniform, who chased Hamdan to his house and handed him over to the military.
‘‘The settlers destroyed his car with stones and slashed one of the tyres,’’ another witness, Raviv, told the Guardian. ‘‘All the windows and windshields were broken.’’
The car of documentary director, Hamdan Ballal. Photograph: Handout
Ballal was injured by the settlers and taken by the Israeli army.
Members of the activist group filmed the attack then entered the house and saw blood over the floor, which a family membersaid was spilled when Hamdan was hit on the head.
The director, and another man – identified only as Nasser – were arrested. It was not clear why, and Israeli army has not yet commented the incident.
This is not the first time that directors and member of crew of No Other Land have been attacked by settlers.
Last February, another Palestinian director of the documentary, Basel Adra, was also surrounded and attacked by masked Israeli settlers.
On Monday, Adra wrote on X that “armed and masked settlers” were “leading a terror attack on Masafer Yatta” as he was writing.
“Dozens of settlers arrived at my friend Naser’s house in Susya, throwing stones at his home, smashing his vehicle, and slashing [the vehicle’s tyres with knives],” he added.
“We risked our life to film,” he said, noting that “soldiers are ordering us to stay inside our homes in the village, while those who attack and could’ve slaughtered the residents in their homes roam freely, masked, around the village”.
Israel’s culture minister has called the Oscar win for the joint Palestinian-Israeli documentary “a sad moment for the world of cinema”.