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		Film academy apologizes for not naming 'No Other Land' co-director in 
		response to attack on him
		[March 29, 2025] 
		By JAKE COYLE 
		NEW YORK (AP) — After mounting criticism following its initial response 
		to the violent attack on Oscar-winning “No Other Land” co-director 
		Hamdan Ballal, the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences 
		apologized Friday for not acknowledging Ballal by name.
 In a letter to academy members, academy CEO Bill Kramer and its 
		president, Janet Yang, said they regretted not issuing a direct 
		statement on Ballal. The director on Monday, witnesses said, was beaten 
		by Israeli settlers in the West Bank and then detained by the Israeli 
		military.
 
 The attack, just weeks after Ballal and his fellow directors won best 
		documentary at the Academy Awards, was widely condemned by numerous film 
		organizations, among others. The academy on Wednesday released a 
		statement condemning “harming or suppressing artists for their work or 
		their viewpoints."
 
 Yuval Abraham, a journalist and co-director of “No Other Land,” was 
		highly critical of that response, comparing it to “silence on Hamdan's 
		assault."
 
 On Friday, more than 600 of the academy's 11,000 members issued an open 
		letter saying the academy's statement "fell far short of the sentiments 
		this moment calls for.” Among the signatories were Joaquin Phoenix, 
		Olivia Colman, Riz Ahmed, Emma Thompson, Javier Bardem, Penélope Cruz 
		and “The Zone of Interest” filmmaker Jonathan Glazer.
 
		
		 
		After a meeting Friday by the academy's board of governors, Kramer and 
		Yang responded with a new statement.
 “We sincerely apologize to Mr. Ballal and all artists who felt 
		unsupported by our previous statement and want to make it clear that the 
		academy condemns violence of this kind anywhere in the world,” they 
		wrote to members. "We abhor the suppression of free speech under any 
		circumstances.”
 
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            Hamdan Ballal, Oscar-winning Palestinian director of "No Other 
			Land," is released from a police station in the West Bank settlement 
			of Kiryat Arba a day after being detained by the Israeli army 
			following an attack by Jewish settlers, Tuesday, March 25, 2025. (AP 
			Photo/Leo Correa) 
            
			 After being detained for more than 
			20 hours, Ballal was released by Israeli soldiers. Ballal and two 
			other Palestinians were accused of throwing stones at a settler, 
			allegations they deny. After being released, Ballal told The 
			Associated Press a settler kicked his head “like a football” during 
			an attack on his village.
 “I realized they were attacking me specifically,” Ballal said at a 
			West Bank hospital after his release Tuesday. “When they say 
			‘Oscar’, you understand. When they say your name, you understand.”
 
 “No Other Land,” a joint Israeli-Palestinian production, chronicles 
			the situation in Masafer Yatta, which the Israeli military 
			designated as a live-fire training zone in the 1980s and ordered the 
			expulsion of the residents, mostly Arab Bedouin. Around 1,000 
			residents have largely remained in place, but soldiers regularly 
			come in to demolish homes, tents, water tanks and olive orchards.
 
 After not finding a U.S. distributor despite wide acclaim, “No Other 
			Land” was self-released in theaters. It still managed to surpass $2 
			million in North American theaters.
 
			
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