RTE: NO TO EURO BOYCOTT
Protest over Israel outside studios falls on deaf ears
RTE has stood by a decision to participate in this year’s Eurovision as demonstrators protested outside its main studios yesterday.
Dozens of people gathered outside the RTE campus in Dublin protesting against Israel’s participation in this year’s song contest.
The event featured human rights activists, artists, musicians and a staged “die-in” where several protesters played dead on the ground to represent health workers who have been killed in Israel’s military operation.
Organised by the IrelandPalestine Solidarity Campaign (IPSC), the protesters said Eurovision was “actively ‘artwashing’ Israel’s war crimes”.
Actor
Among the participants were jazz singer Honor Heffernan, and several other musicians, while awardwinning actor Stephen Rea read Refaat Alareer’s poem If I Should Die.
IPSC’s chair and spokeswoman for the boycott coalition said Ireland should withdraw from the competition.
Zoe Lawlor said: “Israel’s President Yitzhak Herzog has stated ‘it’s important for Israel to appear in Eurovision’.
“We say the opposite. It’s vital to exclude the genocidal apartheid state of Israel from this global cultural platform.”
The IPSC wrote to RTE director-general Kevin Bakhurst and the board of the broadcaster to respect the Palestinian boycott request.
A spokeswoman for the national broadcaster said: “RTE has always approached the Eurovision Song Contest in the spirit in which it was founded – which is a non-political contest designed to unite audiences and bring people together through a shared love of music and entertainment.
Nations
“Thirty-seven nations including Ireland will take part in the 2024 Eurovision Song Contest. RTE is not aware of any participating Public Service Broadcaster who is planning to boycott the upcoming Eurovision Song Contest.”
Irish entrant Bambie Thug has previously backed “an immediate and lasting ceasefire” but has refused to boycott the event.
Alongside UK contender Olly Alexander and Danish hopeful Saba, the artists said in a statement: “In light of the current situation in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, and particularly in Gaza, and in Israel, we do not feel comfortable being silent.”