Jamaica Gleaner

Airbnb reverses course on listings in Israeli settlement­s

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AIRBNB IS rescinding its plan to bar listings in Israeli settlement­s in the West Bank. The home-sharing company announced in November that it would remove about 200 listings in the West Bank, which is territory claimed by Palestinia­ns. Airbnb said Tuesday it will now allow properties in Israeli settlement­s to be listed, but will donate all of its profits from properties in the West Bank to humanitari­an aid organisati­ons.

The company said it will also apply the same approach in other disputed territorie­s in the world, including South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

“We have always sought to bring people together and will continue to work with our community to achieve this goal,”

Airbnb said.

Supporters of Airbnb’s initial plan expressed disappoint­ment.

“Donating profits from unlawful settlement listings, as they’ve promised to do, does nothing to remedy the human suffering they have acknowledg­ed that their activities cause,” said the advocacy group Human Rights Watch in a statement. “By continuing to do business in settlement­s, they remain complicit in the abuses settlement­s trigger.”

But others celebrated the news. “I believe other companies considerin­g boycotts are going to take real note of the mistake Airbnb made and refuse to act against Israel and the Jewish community,” said Nitsana DarshanLei­tner, the director of the Shurat HaDin Israel Law Center, a Tel Aviv-based Israeli advocacy group.

San Francisco-based Airbnb was sued in US federal court by 12 dual US-Israeli citizens who own homes in the settlement­s. Airbnb’s reversal settles that case.

“As a provider of a service to the public, Airbnb is not permitted to refuse to provide services to selected religious groups to engineer who it thinks should be allowed to live where,” said Robert Tolchin, an attorney for the plaintiffs. “We are gratified that the legal process has worked.”

The plan didn’t affect about 20,000 other listings throughout Israel, including listings in other disputed areas like east Jerusalem and the Golan Heights.

Airbnb announced its reversal late Tuesday Israeli time, in the midst of the country’s national elections. During the campaign, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to annex West Bank settlement­s if re-elected, a step that would likely end the remaining hopes of a two-state solution with the Palestinia­ns.

Embarrassi­ng walk back

Darshan-Leitner said she thinks Airbnb “intentiona­lly sought out the busiest news day of the Israeli calendar in order to bury the story of their embarrassi­ng walk back.”

Airbnb didn’t comment beyond its blog post announcing the change.

Even after its announceme­nt in November, Airbnb had slowwalked the decision. Listings in Israeli settlement­s continued to be available on its site, and visitors could book them well into the future. In a January blog post, the company said it was working with experts to identify precise boundaries “and ensure that our technologi­cal solutions attend to the relevant details”.

Political and legal pressure kept mounting. Amnesty Internatio­nal was among those pressuring the company to go even further and ban listings in east Jerusalem. At the same time, Texas, Florida and Illinois said they would prohibit any state business with Airbnb because of its stance on the listings in the West Bank settlement­s.

Airbnb’s rivals, Booking.com, Expedia and TripAdviso­r, continued to offer properties in the settlement­s. TripAdviso­r said it makes clear when properties are within Israeli settlement­s, and it uses the term ‘Palestinia­n Territorie­s’ to refer to the West Bank and other areas.

Israel captured the West Bank and east Jerusalem in the 1967 Middle East war. Today over 400,000 Israeli settlers live in the West Bank, in addition to some 200,000 Israelis in east Jerusalem. The Palestinia­ns claim both areas as parts of a future state.

 ??  ?? This January 17, 2016 file photo shows a guest house advertised on Airbnb internatio­nal home-sharing site in Nofei Prat settlement at the West Bank. AP
This January 17, 2016 file photo shows a guest house advertised on Airbnb internatio­nal home-sharing site in Nofei Prat settlement at the West Bank. AP

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