Booking.com labels settlements, Palestinian towns ‘conflict-affected’
Hotel and lodgings reservation company Booking.com labeled properties in Judea, Samaria and Gaza “conflict-affected,” in a new policy instituted on Friday.
“Please review any travel advisories provided by your government to make an informed decision about your stay in this area, which may be considered conflict-affected,” the site reads, when searching for lodgings in the West Bank.
Some 39 other areas around the world are labeled “conflict-affected,” including the Nagorno-Karabakh region, disputed between Azerbaijan and Armenia, and Georgia’s South Ossetia, which Russia occupied in 2008.
Booking planned to add a unique label to hotels and bed and breakfasts in settlements, saying they are on occupied territory, according to the
Foreign Ministry.
Prime Minister Yair Lapid and Tourism Minister Yoel Razbozov tried to put a positive spin on the development, touting the shift to a unitary label for the whole West Bank as an achievement, and even thanking Booking, though a label still remains.
“Our policy is not to abandon any arena and to make a constant diplomatic effort against anti-Israel false propaganda,” Lapid stated. “We thank Booking for the change of decision. Israel reached an important achievement in its fight against delegitimization.”
MK Simcha Rothman (Religious Zionism) accused Lapid of “thoroughly destroying all of Israel’s diplomatic achievements.
“The prime minister is returning us to the dangerous path of establishing a Palestinian terror state and isolating Israel with BDS methods of labeling Judea and Samaria settlers,” Rothman said. “It’s no wonder that all that is left for him is to be proud of a fake achievement over Booking.com.”
Omar Shakir of Human Rights Watch, who has led the call for tourism websites to boycott settlements, argued that labeling them is not enough.
“Booking.com’s decision to alert consumers about accommodation that may be located in conflict-affected areas is a welcome step towards informing consumers that they are renting homes in occupied territories,” Shakir said.
“But notification in and of itself doesn’t end Booking’s contribution to serious rights abuses,” he said. “The company should stop brokering rentals in illegal settlements in places like the occupied West Bank, built on land stolen from people living under apartheid who are themselves barred from staying there.”