Press. voanews.com
Renowned
French-Lebanese film director Ziad Doueiri appeared before a military court in
Beirut Monday to face questions about his role in a past movie project in
neighboring Israel. Lebanon bans its citizens from travel to Israel or having
business dealings with Israelis as the two nations are in a state of war.
Doueiri was
briefly detained at Beirut's Rafic Hariri airport late Sunday and his passports
confiscated after arriving in Lebanon to promote a new movie that received
critical acclaim at the Venice Film Festival recently. Following his release,
Doueiri's lawyer reportedly told media assembled outside the court that Doueiri
had been freed following several hours of investigation and given back his
travel documents.
At issue was the
earlier film, The Attack, which was released in 2012. The Attack, about a
suicide bombing in the Israeli city of Tel Aviv, was filmed in part in Israel
and banned in Lebanon.
Profoundly hurt
In a statement
to the French news agency before his appearance in court, Doueiri said, “I am
profoundly hurt. I came back to Lebanon with a prize from Venice. The Lebanese
police have authorized the broadcast of my film (The Insult). I have no idea
who is responsible for what has happened.”
Doueiri had
flown from the Venice Film Festival, where The Insult, his fourth film, had won
the Coppa Volpi best actor prize for Palestinian actor Kamel El Basha. The
Insult is set in Beirut and focuses on the escalation of a minor argument
between a Palestinian refugee and a Lebanese Christian.
Doueiri was
offered the support of Lebanon's culture minister, Ghattas Khoury, following
the brief detention. “Ziad Doueiri is a great Lebanese director and that has
been honored across the world,” Khoury tweeted, before adding, “Respecting and
honoring him is a duty.” Doueiri, however, angered many Lebanese when the
earlier movie, The Attack, was released.
Unpredictable
approach
According to
Ayman Mhanna, director of Lebanon-based free speech NGO SKeyes, Doueiri's
appearance in court was symptomatic of an unpredictable approach within the
government regarding the director's time in Israel. Although Mhanna “did not
question” the laws preventing Lebanese visits to Israel, he told VOA that
Doueiri had visited Lebanon numerous times without repercussion.
The government's
response was “chaotic” and “destabilizing,” he added, with one part of it
endorsing Doueiri and another seeking to detain him. Mhanna noted that the
Ministry of Culture recently backed Doueiri's latest film, The Insult, to
represent Lebanon in the foreign film category at next year's Academy Awards in
the United States.
Meanwhile, the
trying of civilians in military courts has also attracted criticism. A report
by Human Rights Watch earlier this year highlighted the use of such courts to
try civilians involved in protests against the Lebanese government's handling
of the country's waste crisis. Bassam Khawaja, of Human Rights Watch, told VOA,
“Regardless of detentions being brought, Doueiri should not be tried in a
military court.
“Unfortunately
military courts are still used in Lebanon to try civilians on a broad range of
charges, in violation of their due process rights and international law. “These
trials largely take place behind closed doors, with limited grounds for appeal,
and it is difficult to see how he would get a fair trial there.”
Long history
There is a a
long history of perceived moments of Israeli acknowledgment or collaboration
drawing swift rebuke in Lebanon, which was first invaded by its southern
neighbor in 1978. In May, global box office hit Wonder Woman was barred from
Lebanese theaters because it starred former Israeli army soldier Gal Gadot.
Last month, Swedish-Lebanese dual citizen Amanda Hanna was stripped of her
title Miss Lebanon Emigrant after those behind the event discovered she had
visited Israel using her Swedish passport in 2016.
Doueiri is one
of the most acclaimed Lebanese directors of his generation. He first made a
name for himself with Lebanese civil war classic West Beirut, which was
released in 1998. He began his career as first camera assistant for Quentin
Tarantino on the director's films Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction, and Jackie
Brown.