The makers of Gaza: Doctors Under Attack had a warning for the BBC as they accepted their trophy at the TV Baftas tonight.
Nominated in the current affairs category, the film went up against Breaking Ranks: Inside Israel’s War (Exposure), The Covid Contracts: Follow the Money, and Undercover in the Police (Panorama) at the ceremony hosted by Greg Davies at the Southbank Centre’s Royal Festival Hall.
Doctors Under Attack was a forensic investigation into Israeli military attacks on hospitals in Gaza. It also examined allegations of abuse of healthcare workers in Gaza.
Originally set to air last February, the documentary was commissioned by the BBC but produced by an independent production company.
It was then shelved by the broadcaster over impartiality concerns and aired on Channel 4 in July.
Tonight, while picking up their prize at the ceremony (which takes place around two hours before the TV broadcast), journalist Ramita Navai said: ‘Israel has killed over 47,000 children and women in Gaza. So far, Israel has bombed and targeted every single one of Gaza’s hospitals.
‘It’s killed over 1,700 Palestinian doctors and healthcare workers. It has imprisoned over 400 in what the UN now calls the Medicide.
‘These are the findings of our investigation that the BBC paid for but refused to show.
‘But we refuse to be silenced and censored.’
Navai, 52, was joined onstage by executive producer Ben de Pear, 55, who said: ‘Finally, just a question for the BBC: given you dropped our film, will you drop us from the Bafta screening later tonight?’
In their statement last June, the BBC said it was ‘determined to report all aspects of the conflict in the Middle East impartially and fairly’.
At the time, BBC News reported that the decision to cut ties with the film was made after Navai appeared on Radio 4’s Today, where he said that Israel had ‘become a rogue state that’s committing war crimes and ethnic cleansing and mass murdering Palestinians’.
Earlier that week, Ben de Pear, the former editor of Channel 4 News, also made comments at the Sheffield Documentary Festival.
Speaking during the Too Hot To Handle: The Future of Political Documentaries panel, he said the BBC was ‘racist’ in its reporting of Gaza and had taken an ‘indefensible’ position for PR purposes, instead of ‘standing up for its journalism’.
He added that people within the corporation were ‘ashamed’ of its coverage, also hitting out at then-Director General Tim Davie for ‘taking editorial decisions, which frankly he is not capable of making’.
Shortly after both incidents, Gaza: Doctors Under Attack was put on indefinite hold by the BBC.
This also came pending the outcome of an investigation into a separate documentary, Gaza: How To Survive A Warzone, which aired on BBC Two in early 2025. It was produced by Hoyo Films.
In the aftermath, the BBC said it ‘could not broadcast [Gaza: Doctors Under Attack] while a review into a separate Gaza documentary was ongoing’.
‘With both films coming from independent production companies and both about Gaza, it was right to wait for any relevant findings – and put them into action – before broadcasting the film,’ their full statement began.
‘However, we wanted the doctors’ voices to be heard. Our aim was to find a way to air some of the material in our news programmes, in line with our impartiality standards, before the review was published.
‘For some weeks, the BBC has been working with Basement Films to find a way to tell the stories of these doctors on our platforms.’
They went on to say it had become ‘apparent’ that the ‘end of the road’ had been reached with the discussion.
‘We have come to the conclusion that broadcasting this material risked creating a perception of partiality that would not meet the high standards that the public rightly expect of the BBC.’
The corporation further clarified that any version of the film broadcast would ‘not be a BBC film’, apologising to the doctors and contributors for not ‘telling their stories’.
‘The BBC will continue to cover events in Gaza impartially.’
When Doctors Under Attack was given the new transmission date of July 2, Channel 4 stated that it had been ‘fact-checked’ to ensure it met their ‘editorial standards’ and complied with the Ofcom Broadcasting Code.
Louisa Compton, Channel 4’s head of news and current affairs and specialist factual and sport, said in a statement: ‘This is a meticulously reported and important film examining evidence which supports allegations of grave breaches of international law by Israeli forces that deserves to be widely seen and exemplifies Channel 4’s commitment to brave and fearless journalism.’
Compton added in an op-ed that Channel 4 wanted to air the programme because they believe that ‘[they] are presenting a duly impartial view of a subject that both divides opinion and frequently provokes dispute about what constitutes a fact’.
Gaza: Doctors Under Attack is available to stream on Channel 4.
The TV Baftas 2026 are streaming on BBC iPlayer.
Bafta TV award winners 2026
Supporting actor – Owen Cooper, Adolescence
Supporting actress – Christine Tremarco, Adolescence
Reality – Celebrity Traitors
Scripted comedy – Amandaland
Factual series – See No Evil
Children’s non-scripted – World. War. Me. (Sky Kids Investigates)
Children’s scripted – Crongto
Entertainment – Last One Laughing
Limited Drama – Adolescence
Single documentary – Grenfell: Uncovered
Short form – Hustle and Run
Live Event Coverage – VE Day 80
Actor in a comedy – Steve Coogan, How Are You? It’s Alan (Partridge)
Actress in a comedy – Katherine Parkinson, Here We Go
Soap – EastEnders
Sports coverage – UEFA Women’s Euro 2025
Daytime – Scam Interceptors
Current Affairs – Gaza: Doctors Under Attack
News coverage – Channel 4 News: Israel-Iran: The Twelve Day War
Factual entertainment – Go Back To Where You Came From
Bafta special award – Martin Lewis
P&O Cruises memorable moment – Alan Carr wins The Celebrity Traitors
International – The Studio
Bafta Fellowship – Dame Mary Berry
Entertainment performance – Bob Mortimer, Last One Laughing
Drama series – Code of Silence
Leading actress – Narges Rashidi, Prisoner 951
Leading actor – Stephen Graham, Adolescence