Barcelona LGBTQ+ organisation cancels Eurovision party in solidarity with Palestinians
Barcelona’s long-established LGBTQIA organisation El Casal Lambda has cancelled this year’s edition of its annual Eurovision party at the city’s primary LGBTQIA centre, and joined over 100 LGBTQIA groups boycotting the contest in Tel Aviv, in solidarity with Palestinian human rights.
In a statement on Wednesday, El Casal Lambda said they had cancelled the event, due to take place at the Centre LGTBI de Barcelona next Saturday 18th May, citing their “long and extensive experience defending human rights”.
The organisation, established in 1976 to advocate for the rights of the LGBTQIA community in Barcelona, said it was joining other LGBTQIA groups in “condemning this year’s Eurovision”.
More than 100 LGBTQIA organisations in 25 countries have supported the call from Palestinian queer groups for the boycott of the contest hosted by Israel, including BeLongTo, Ireland’s national LGBTQIA youth organisation, and the Naples and Padua sections of Arcigay, Italy’s oldest and largest LGBTQIA advocacy organisation.
The widespread calls to boycott the contest, which have seen more than 136,000 people sign petitions, are part of the nonviolent Palestinian-led Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement. Established in 2005, BDS calls for pressure on Israel to end its decades-old regime of occupation, apartheid and denial of Palestinian refugee rights.
Many alternative, or apartheid-free Eurovision parties are planned across Europe on the night of the live broadcast from Tel Aviv, including in Barcelona, London and Street 66, one of Dublin’s premiere LGBTQIA bars. Organisers have produced a guide on hosting apartheid-free Eurovision parties in clubs or at home.
Many of the concerts will be broadcast online as part of Globalvision, a four-hour livestream that will platform LGBTQIA and drag performers, and say “no to art-washing, no to military occupation, and yes to the right of all refugees to return”.
Two Palestinians, including a 14-year-old boy, were shot and killed by Israeli settlers on Tuesday in the village of Al-Mughayyir in the occupied West Bank. A total of three Palestinians have been killed so far today by Israeli settlers across the occupied territories, including two children, amid a spike in settler violence against Palestinians.
Belgian Foreign Minister Maxime Prévot has urged the EU to impose sanctions on Israel ahead of a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Luxembourg, joining seven EU countries, including France and Sweden, in the call. He also slammed the Israeli assault on Lebanon as “totally unacceptable.”
France and Sweden have co-signed a paper urging the European Union to ban imports from illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank, and to consider tariffs and tighter import restrictions on such goods.