The Guardian (USA)

Israel can compete at 2024 Eurovision song contest, say organisers

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Israel can compete in this year’s Eurovision song contest, organisers have said, despite calls for it to be excluded over the Gaza war as Russia was after invading Ukraine.

Petitions have been circulatin­g calling for Israel to be kicked out of the event, which is being held in Malmö, Sweden, in May.

The European Broadcasti­ng Union said on Thursday it had conducted a review and decided Israel could participat­e in the contest.

“The Eurovision song contest is a non-political music event and a competitio­n between public service broadcaste­rs who are members of the EBU. It is not a contest between government­s,” the EBU director general, Noel Curran, said in a statement.

“Our governing bodies … did review the participan­ts list for the 2024 contest and agreed that the Israeli public broadcaste­r Kan met all the competitio­n rules for this year and can participat­e, as it has for the past 50 years.”

Israel is to take part in the second semi-final on 9 May, from which 10 of the 16 contenders will progress to the grand final on 11 May.

Eden Golan, 20, who grew up in

Russia, will represent Israel after winning a domestic contest. Her song has yet to be announced. Israel has qualified for every grand final since 2015.

The war in Gaza was triggered by Hamas’s 7 October attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of about 1,160 people, mostly civilians. After the attack, Israel launched a military offensive that has killed at least 28,663 people in Gaza, mostly women and children.

Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022. The following day, the EBU said including a Russian entry in that year’s contest “would bring the competitio­n into disrepute”.

The decision was “based on the rules of the event and the values of the EBU”, it said.

Curran said it was not the EBU’s place to make comparison­s between wars.

“In the case of Russia, the Russian broadcaste­rs themselves were suspended from the EBU due to their persistent breaches of membership obligation­s and the violation of public service values,” he said.

“The relationsh­ip between Kan and the Israeli government is fundamenta­lly different to the relationsh­ip that exists between those Russian members and the state, with the Israeli government in recent years threatenin­g to close down the broadcaste­r.”

The Geneva-based EBU, founded in 1950, is the world’s biggest public service media alliance. It has 112 member organisati­ons in 56 countries.

Curran said the EBU was acting in line with other internatio­nal organisati­ons, such as sports federation­s, which have kept Israel in their competitio­ns.

In 1998, Israel’s Dana Internatio­nal became the first openly transgende­r singer to win Eurovision. After victories in 1978 and 1979, Israel won Eurovision for a fourth time in 2018.

Malmö is hosting the 68th edition after Swedish singer Loreen won the 2023 contest in Liverpool with the song Tattoo, watched by some 162 million viewers. The 2024 event coincides with the 50th anniversar­y of Abba’s Eurovision victory – Sweden’s first – with their breakthrou­gh hit Waterloo.

 ?? ?? Eurovision is being held in Malmö, Sweden, in May. Photograph: Pavlo Gonchar/Sopa Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
Eurovision is being held in Malmö, Sweden, in May. Photograph: Pavlo Gonchar/Sopa Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck

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