Hamdan Ballal, a Palestinian co-director of the Oscar-winning documentary No Other Land, was arrested by the Israeli soldiers in the occupied West Bank after being attacked and injured by settlers, his fellow co-director Yuval Abraham said on Monday, according to Al Jazeera.
The Israeli military also confirmed it arrested three Palestinians in the Masafar Yatta area, but did not name Ballal.
In a post on X, the Israeli military said it sent soldiers to the village of Susya to defuse tensions after “terrorists” threw stones at Israeli settlers. But the “terrorists” began throwing stones at the soldiers and the police, resulting in the arrest of three Palestinians and an Israeli, it said.
However, it denied reports that a “Palestinian was arrested while inside an ambulance”.
Earlier, co-director Abraham had said that a group of “armed KKK-like masked settlers” had “lynched” Ballal and that he had injuries to his stomach and head. But Israeli “soldiers invaded the ambulance he called, and took him”, AFP had reported.
In a post on X, Abraham said a “group of settlers” had set upon Ballal.
“They beat him and he has injuries in his head and stomach, bleeding.
Soldiers invaded the ambulance he called, and took him. No sign of him since,” Abraham wrote.
He clarified in a subsequent post that, “Hamdan was assaulted and beaten up, not murdered. My use of ‘lynched’ was a mistranslation from Hebrew (English isn’t my first language). He’s injured and being held at a police station in a settlement. They did not let his lawyer speak to him yet so we don’t know more.”
The incident took place in the southern West Bank village of Susiya, according to the anti-occupation NGO Centre for Jewish Nonviolence, whose members said they filmed the events first-hand. Abraham also shared footage of the attack by the Israeli settlers in a post on X, which showed the attackers hurling rocks at a vehicle.
The video provided by the Center for Jewish Nonviolence showed a masked settler shoving and swinging his fists at two activists from the group in a dusty field at night, Al Jazeera reported separately.
The activists rush back to their car. “Get in, get in!” one shouts, and they duck inside as the thuds of rocks can be heard hitting the car.
“Car window was broken,” the driver says as they drive off.
A group of 10 to 20 masked settlers also attacked Jewish activists at the scene with stones and sticks, smashed their car windows and slashed their tyres.
According to their lawyer Lea Tsemel, police told her they were being held at an unidentified military base for “medical treatment”, Associated Press reported.
But Tsemel said she hadn’t been able to reach them and had no further information on their whereabouts.
Basel Adra, the co-director of No Other Land, witnessed the detention and said about 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 pelting stones.
“We came back from the Oscars and every day since there is an attack on us,” Adra told Associated Press. “This might be their revenge on us for making the movie. It feels like a punishment.”
Israel has occupied the West Bank since 1967. No Other Land, which was directed by Israeli-Palestinian activists, won best documentary at this year’s Academy Awards.
Shot in nearby Masafer Yatta, the documentary follows a young Palestinian struggling with forced displacement as the Israeli army tears down his community’s homes to make space for a firing zone.
The Israeli army declared Masafer Yatta a restricted military zone in the 1980s.
The West Bank, excluding Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem, is home to around three million Palestinians as well as nearly half a million Israelis who live in settlements that are illegal under international law.