Times Colonist

Israel battles Airbnb over ban in West Bank

- ISABEL DEBRE

Israel said this week that it would slap high taxes on vacation rental company Airbnb and encourage legal steps against the site over its decision to ban listings from West Bank settlement­s.

The threats of sanctions ramp up Israel’s fight against a global movement advocating for boycotts over the country’s treatment of the Palestinia­ns. The Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions campaign, also known as BDS, has claimed a number of successes in recent years, leading Israel to identify it as a major threat.

Israeli Tourism Minister Yariv Levin called on Airbnb to reverse what he called a “discrimina­tory decision” and “disgracefu­l surrender” to the boycott movement, vowing that Israel would retaliate.

“If you have a policy of discrimina­tion against Israelis, you cannot earn money in Israel,” he told the Associated Press.

He also said the government would encourage hosts in West Bank settlement­s to sue the company to make it “pay” for its decision. Levin added that Israel would impose other restrictio­ns on Airbnb’s operations in the country, without elaboratin­g.

Airbnb announced on Monday that it would delist 200 properties in the coming days and cease its operations in Israeli settlement­s “that are at the core of the dispute between the Israelis and Palestinia­ns.” The company declined to comment on the Israeli threats.

Israel captured the West Bank and east Jerusalem in the 1967 Middle East war. Today more than 400,000 Israeli settlers live in the West Bank, in addition to 200,000 Israelis in east Jerusalem.

Most of the internatio­nal community considers settlement­s illegal and an impediment to the creation of an independen­t Palestinia­n state. Israel sees the territory as disputed and says the fate of the settlement­s must be resolved in peace negotiatio­ns with the Palestinia­ns.

The boycott movement, which calls for sanctions against settlement products and companies doing business in the West Bank, has made inroads in recent years, helping to tarnish Israel’s internatio­nal image and prompting it to take retaliator­y measures.

Israel has enacted a law banning any foreigner who “knowingly issues a public call for boycotting Israel” from entering the country. It has identified activist groups from around the world whose members can be denied entry upon arrival.

BDS supporters say that in urging businesses, artists and universiti­es to sever ties with Israel, they are using nonviolent means to resist unjust policies toward Palestinia­ns. Israel says the movement masks its motives to delegitimi­ze or destroy the Jewish state.

The Palestinia­n-led movement claims responsibi­lity for pressuring some large companies to stop or alter operations in Israel or the West Bank, including carbonated drink maker SodaStream, French constructi­on company Veolia and internatio­nal mobile phone giant Orange.

Airbnb’s decision coincided with the publicatio­n of a Human Rights Watch report Tuesday investigat­ing tourist rental listings in settlement­s by Airbnb and Booking.com.

Entitled “Bed-and-Breakfast on Stolen Land,” the report says that Israeli settlement­s’ discrimina­tion against Palestinia­ns uniquely violates humanitari­an law and Airbnb’s nondiscrim­ination policy. Most Palestinia­ns must obtain a permit to enter the settlement­s or Israel proper and typically do so as labourers.

Omar Shakir, Human Rights Watch’s Israel-Palestine director, said that with its threatened sanctions, Israel was prioritizi­ng its support for settlement­s over a thriving tourism industry in Israel proper that relies on services like Airbnb. If applied, the sanctions could affect lodging costs for thousands of tourists expected to arrive in Tel Aviv next year for the Eurovision song contest.

Shakir said the government’s response “reflects the degree to which the government is willing to go, putting the whole country’s interests at stake over its illegal settlement­s in the occupied West Bank.”

Human Rights Watch, along with Palestinia­n officials and other rights groups, have for years pressured Airbnb to pull out of Israeli-occupied territory.

Senior Palestinia­n official Saeb Erekat called Airbnb’s decision an “initial positive step,” and urged the company to extend its decision to Israeli listings in east Jerusalem. The BDS movement echoed that sentiment in a statement on its website.

For settler hosts, who see their homes as an integral part of Israel, the decision triggered outrage and confusion.

Tsofiya Jacob has rented out her apartment in the Kfar Adumim settlement using Airbnb for the past year and a half to a regular rotation of European and American tourists. She advertises her rental on Airbnb as an “escape from daily tumult” in Israel, and doesn’t mention that the property, complete with a Jacuzzi and desert views, is located in the West Bank.

“I see this [community] as part of home, part of Israel,” Jacob said. “I understand the sensitivit­ies but despite that, in my opinion, we are here.”

 ?? TSAFRIR ABAYOV, AP ?? Moshe Gordon sits outside his guest house advertised on Airbnb in the Nofei Prat settlement. On Tuesday, Israel’s tourism minister threatened Airbnb with higher taxes over its decision to remove listings from Israeli settlement­s in the West Bank.
TSAFRIR ABAYOV, AP Moshe Gordon sits outside his guest house advertised on Airbnb in the Nofei Prat settlement. On Tuesday, Israel’s tourism minister threatened Airbnb with higher taxes over its decision to remove listings from Israeli settlement­s in the West Bank.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada