LONDON: The filmmakers behind “Gaza: Doctors Under Attack” criticized the BBC over its decision to shelve the documentary during their acceptance speech at the BAFTA TV Awards on Sunday.
The film won in the current affairs category after being dropped by the BBC over impartiality concerns, and was later picked up by Channel 4.
Accepting the award, journalist and presenter Ramita Navai said that the film highlighted findings from an investigation into attacks on Gaza’s healthcare system.
“These are the findings of our investigation that the BBC paid for but refused to show,” she said. “But we refuse to be silenced and censored. We thank Channel 4 for showing this film.”
Navai said that more than 1,700 Palestinian doctors and healthcare workers had been killed and more than 400 detained during Israel’s war on Gaza.
She dedicated the award to Palestinian medical workers held in Israeli prisons.
Gaza: Doctors Under Attack wins a BAFTA Award
Executive Producer Ben de Pear, "Just a question for the BBC, given you that you dropped our film will you drop us from the BAFTA TV screening later on tonight?"
And guess what, they edited it to this shorter version pic.twitter.com/2dYBSEShWu
— Farrukh (@implausibleblog) May 10, 2026
According to local reports, the BBC did not air Navai’s speech in full and instead broadcast an edited version that removed her remarks about Israel, reigniting criticism of the corporation’s handling of Gaza-related coverage.
The BAFTA awards are broadcast on BBC One after a two-hour delay.
The documentary, which features firsthand accounts from Palestinian health workers in Gaza, was honored at London’s Royal Festival Hall nearly a year after the BBC declined to air it.
Executive producer Ben de Pear also used the acceptance speech to thank Jaber Badwan and Osama Al-Ashi — the journalists behind the film — before addressing the BBC directly.
“Finally, just a question for the BBC: Given you dropped our film, will you drop us from the Bafta screening later tonight?”
The BBC commissioned the documentary from independent production company Basement Films more than a year ago, but delayed its release while reviewing another Gaza-related documentary, “Gaza: How to Survive a War Zone.”
It later said that it would not air “Gaza: Doctors Under Attack,” arguing that the film risked creating “a perception of partiality that would not meet the high standards that the public rightly expect of the BBC.” The broadcaster also said that impartiality remained “a core principle of BBC News.”
The film was later acquired and broadcast by Channel 4 in July.










