The Jerusalem Post

Netanyahu: Government won’t intervene in Eurovision

- • By AMY SPIRO

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu promised on Monday that the Israeli government would not intervene in next year’s Eurovision competitio­n.

Netanyahu held a meeting on Monday with Communicat­ions Minister Ayoub Kara, Culture Minister Miri Regev, Tourism Minister Yariv Levin, Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit and others to discuss the upcoming contest.

Following the meeting, the Prime Minister’s Office issued a statement making it clear that the government will follow the rules and regulation­s of the European Broadcasti­ng Union.

The meeting occurred amid a swirl of controvers­y surroundin­g Regev and her many public and divisive statements about the competitio­n.

Earlier this month, Regev proclaimed that if the competitio­n couldn’t be hosted in Jerusalem, it shouldn’t be in Israel at all. And on Saturday night, the culture minister said she had reached out to the Kan public broadcaste­r with her “personal opinion,” requesting coordinati­on on the video clips that will be played between songs during the competitio­n.

But several other lawmakers have pushed back against Regev’s attempts to insert politics into the contest.

On Monday morning, Kara tweeted that he promised “not to politicall­y intervene” and that “the Eurovision will be held in Israel. If it’s up to me,” he added, “It would be in our capital Jerusalem.”

On Sunday, Zionist Union MK Ayelet Nahmias-Verbin worked to gather signatures from her fellow lawmakers for a petition to Netanyahu to rebuke Regev. The petition called for the prime minister to instruct Regev “to stop dealing with the Eurovision contest in Israel.”

Nahmias-Verbin blamed the culture minister for the canceled Argentina-Israeli match earlier this month, and said Regev’s interventi­on could lead to the Eurovision being pulled out of Israel as well.

The first official planning meeting between Kan representa­tives and the EBU is set to be held in Geneva on Tuesday. A spokeswoma­n for Kan said Monday that the teams would discuss a wide variety of issues, but would not elaborate. A spokeswoma­n from the EBU said it would only comment on the meetings “when they are concluded.”

Earlier this month, the EBU told The Jerusalem Post that it “insists that every Host Broadcaste­r takes all necessary steps to safeguard the non-political character of the event throughout the organizati­on of the competitio­n.”

In addition to the date and location of next year’s contest, the meeting in Geneva is certain to include a discussion of the legal status of Kan in Israel and its temporary membership in EBU.

The political compromise deal – sanctioned by Netanyahu – which created Kan last year, calls for its news division to be split from its entertainm­ent and current events coverage. The split has been temporaril­y halted by the High Court, but no permanent ruling has been made. If the news division is split off, Kan would not qualify for membership in the EBU.

After the meeting on Monday, the Prime Minister’s Office noted that there are “open legal issues regarding the Eurovision” in light of the upcoming High Court decision. Netanyahu, the statement said, “will examine the legal aspects of this issue with the relevant authoritie­s before making a decision.”

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