Zürcher Nachrichten - Eurovision reels from boycotts over Israel

EUR -
AED 4.310807
AFN 73.936322
ALL 95.356886
AMD 432.61215
ANG 2.100607
AOA 1077.364261
ARS 1630.325761
AUD 1.622832
AWG 2.115413
AZN 1.995533
BAM 1.954908
BBD 2.363631
BDT 144.254778
BGN 1.957683
BHD 0.4429
BIF 3493.320561
BMD 1.173599
BND 1.493925
BOB 8.109299
BRL 5.774696
BSD 1.173569
BTN 112.166286
BWP 15.840838
BYN 3.281117
BYR 23002.547833
BZD 2.360223
CAD 1.609098
CDF 2594.828274
CHF 0.916769
CLF 0.027245
CLP 1072.293931
CNY 7.974585
CNH 7.973822
COP 4428.811977
CRC 535.557858
CUC 1.173599
CUP 31.100384
CVE 110.214699
CZK 24.333468
DJF 208.973736
DKK 7.471233
DOP 69.258686
DZD 155.225565
EGP 62.082465
ERN 17.603991
ETB 183.238671
FJD 2.566486
FKP 0.859751
GBP 0.867818
GEL 3.139412
GGP 0.859751
GHS 13.248953
GIP 0.859751
GMD 85.672486
GNF 10297.344251
GTQ 8.953952
GYD 245.517948
HKD 9.187347
HNL 31.205758
HRK 7.53592
HTG 153.320679
HUF 357.723069
IDR 20566.331562
ILS 3.41981
IMP 0.859751
INR 112.397549
IQD 1537.29839
IRR 1539237.197465
ISK 143.613768
JEP 0.859751
JMD 185.435369
JOD 0.832042
JPY 184.985671
KES 151.570306
KGS 102.631773
KHR 4707.851377
KMF 491.738092
KPW 1056.260855
KRW 1749.742347
KWD 0.361633
KYD 0.977941
KZT 544.323894
LAK 25726.258755
LBP 105090.43762
LKR 379.058616
LRD 214.76107
LSL 19.398229
LTL 3.465334
LVL 0.709899
LYD 7.424611
MAD 10.710212
MDL 20.084577
MGA 4903.761965
MKD 61.653091
MMK 2463.330812
MNT 4202.483677
MOP 9.462941
MRU 46.812635
MUR 54.797298
MVR 18.085525
MWK 2035.062545
MXN 20.240951
MYR 4.616969
MZN 74.991889
NAD 19.398147
NGN 1608.875455
NIO 43.190472
NOK 10.774693
NPR 179.465858
NZD 1.97322
OMR 0.451269
PAB 1.173564
PEN 4.022081
PGK 5.111667
PHP 72.205713
PKR 326.920089
PLN 4.251722
PYG 7163.761041
QAR 4.277766
RON 5.204444
RSD 117.409273
RUB 86.465288
RWF 1716.394715
SAR 4.40309
SBD 9.426653
SCR 16.309883
SDG 704.749603
SEK 10.909064
SGD 1.493
SHP 0.87621
SLE 28.870029
SLL 24609.787683
SOS 670.696757
SRD 43.721854
STD 24291.137663
STN 24.488928
SVC 10.268314
SYP 129.717262
SZL 19.391233
THB 38.05862
TJS 10.972592
TMT 4.119334
TND 3.412942
TOP 2.825746
TRY 53.281242
TTD 7.964399
TWD 37.010594
TZS 3042.561155
UAH 51.579179
UGX 4410.986863
USD 1.173599
UYU 46.668701
UZS 14236.502582
VES 586.606069
VND 30911.43405
VUV 138.864327
WST 3.179627
XAF 655.657763
XAG 0.013893
XAU 0.000251
XCD 3.171711
XCG 2.115044
XDR 0.813726
XOF 655.660555
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.004402
ZAR 19.3961
ZMK 10563.802165
ZMW 22.091917
ZWL 377.898521
  • GSK

    1.1550

    50.965

    +2.27%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    23.08

    -0.17%

  • RYCEF

    -0.7300

    16.06

    -4.55%

  • NGG

    -0.3200

    86.84

    -0.37%

  • AZN

    3.6450

    185.505

    +1.96%

  • BTI

    2.6050

    63.045

    +4.13%

  • BP

    0.1300

    44.35

    +0.29%

  • BCC

    -1.1550

    68.045

    -1.7%

  • BCE

    0.2150

    24.495

    +0.88%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    23.54

    -0.3%

  • VOD

    -1.2250

    15.095

    -8.12%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.15

    +0.15%

  • RIO

    -0.7100

    107.19

    -0.66%

  • RELX

    -0.0750

    33.195

    -0.23%

  • RBGPF

    -2.6100

    61

    -4.28%

Eurovision reels from boycotts over Israel
Eurovision reels from boycotts over Israel / Photo: Fabrice COFFRINI - AFP

Eurovision reels from boycotts over Israel

The boycotts already announced by four countries over Israel's participation in the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest were casting a shadow Friday over the glitzy annual TV extravaganza and its spirit of unity.

Text size:

Meeting at the European Broadcasting Union's Genevea headquarters, members of the EBU -- the world's biggest public service media alliance -- decided Thursday that no vote was needed on Israel's inclusion in next year's 70th edition, to be held in Vienna.

Public broadcasters in Spain, Ireland, the Netherlands and Slovenia swiftly announced they were boycotting the world's biggest live televised music event.

Others may follow, with Iceland considering its position.

Widespread opposition to the two-year war in Gaza had led to mounting calls for Israel to be excluded.

There were suspicions, too, about manipulation of the televoting system to favour Israel.

At this year's event in Basel, Switzerland, Israel's entrant finished second after a huge public vote.

Spain's RTVE said Israel was using the contest for political objectives, making it hard to maintain Eurovision as a neutral cultural event.

"What happened at the EBU assembly confirms that Eurovision is not a song contest but a festival dominated by geopolitical interests and fractured by internal divisions," RTVE president Jose Pablo Lopez said on X.

- Participation drop -

Some 37 countries took part in the 2025 edition, won by Austrian operatic singer JJ with "Wasted Love".

Eurovision director Martin Green said he expected the number of participating countries would drop in Vienna.

"We estimate there'll be about 35 broadcasters participating," he told Eurovision News Exchange.

He said "about five" countries "very passionately" felt Israel should not be allowed to participate.

"I very much hope that those few broadcasters who feel they can't be there next year will return back to us in 2027," he said.

EBU members had a "full, frank, honest, and quite moving debate", and "what they really came together on is a belief that Eurovision Song Contest shouldn't be used as a political theatre", he said.

"It must retain some sense of neutrality."

Roland Weissmann, the director of Austrian host broadcaster ORF, told reporters that at least three new broadcasters were looking to take part in 2026.

Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin said he fully understood broadcaster RTE's boycott decision, calling it "an act of solidarity with those journalists who were killed" in the Gaza Strip.

"Without those journalists, the world would not have known to the degree that it knows the horrors of what transpired in Gaza," he said.

Belgian broadcaster RTBF decided it was staying in Eurovision, but its chief Jean-Paul Philippot said their participation was "accompanied by a clear stance to denounce obstacles to freedom of information".

Belgium's Media Minister Jacqueline Galant said: "Let's make sure we keep culture as a bridge between peoples, especially when politicians refuse to lead the way."

- 'Non-political celebration' -

Spain may have withdrawn but the competition's other big nations were keen to confirm their backing.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer's office stressed the event was a "non-political celebration of music and culture".

French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said he was pleased Eurovision "did not yield to pressure".

In Tel Aviv, local resident Yovel Naim said she was not surprised by the furore, as it was "a show that is supposedly about music, but in the end is very political".

"Actually I was pleasantly surprised that they chose not to kick us out," the 27-year-old told AFP.

burs-rjm/jxb

N.Zaugg--NZN