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Freida Pinto stars in Miral, a film tracing the Arab-Israeli conflict after 1948 from a Palestinian perspective. Image Credit: AP

United Nations: Israel has complained to the United Nations for allowing the US premiere of a controversial film on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict at the UN headquarters.

A red-carpet showing of Miral by award winning American-Jewish director Julian Schnabel was to be held at the UN General Assembly hall yesterday.

The film is based on an autobiographical novel by Palestinian journalist Rula Jebreal that traces the Arab-Israeli conflict after 1948 from a Palestinian perspective. The lead role is played by Indian actress Freida Pinto of Slumdog Millionaire fame.

"This is clearly a politicised decision of the UN, one that shows poor judgment and a lack of even-handedness," Israel's mission to the UN said in a statement which called on General Assembly president Joseph Deiss of Switzerland not to host the event in the headquarters.

General Assembly spokesman Jean-Victor Nkolo denied there was any "political link" to the film, which is a French, Israeli, Italian, Indian co-production.

"It is just a venue," he said. "Several films have been shown at the UN."

Contentious

But Haim Waxman, Israel's deputy ambassador, said: "We are not aware of any other films with such contentious political content that have received this kind of endorsement from the president of the GA."

The premiere of Miral comes as the UN steps up condemnation of Israel's renewed colony activity in the Palestinian territories which it says is blocking direct peace talks.

And the film is unusual because of the involvement of Schnabel, an American Jew, who won the best director award at the Cannes film festival for The Diving Bell and the Butterfly in 2007.

Schnabel and Jebreal and stars from the movie — shot in Israel and the West Bank — will be at the premiere to be attended by several UN mission chiefs.

"Obviously it's a Palestinian story, but it's very important that an American Jewish person tell a Palestinian story," Schnabel, 58, said in an interview with AFP last year just before Miral was shown at the Venice film festival.

Beginnings

Like Jebreal, Miral grew up in an orphanage in occupied East Jerusalem set up by a Jerusalem socialite from a wealthy Palestinian family, who one morning in 1948 came across 55 children who escaped a village taken over by radical Jewish militants.

Adapted with the author, Schnabel's film traces the lives of these two women from the establishment of the orphanage until the Oslo peace accords of 1993.

"The whole point is because I'm an American Jew, and that's why it touched me because it's a big part of my life," Schnabel said.