Palestinians call on Iceland's Eurovision contestant Hatari to withdraw
Cancelling performance in apartheid Tel Aviv would be a meaningful expression of solidarity for the band, who are on record supporting Palestinian rights.
Reykjavík (QNN) - The Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI) has called on Iceland’s Eurovision entrant Hatari to withdraw from the contest, to be held in Tel Aviv next month.
PACBI, a founding member of the Palestinian Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) Movement National Committee, the largest Palestinian civil society coalition, said that “[t]he most meaningful expression of solidarity is to cancel performances in apartheid Israel”.
Hatari have previously said, “If Iceland’s contestant does not use their influence to point out the obvious, the absurdity of frolicking and dancing at the same time as millions live just a few miles away with reduced freedom and constant uncertainty about their own wellbeing and safety, then we have failed. If Iceland’s contestant ignores the fact that the competition is inherently political, he does little to diminish the need for a critical conversation about Israel.”
Alia Malak of PACBI recently told Pinknews, “[t]housands of artists now publicly support the call from Palestinian artists and cultural organisations for the cultural boycott of Israel.”
More than 100,000 people have signed petitions supporting the Palestinian call for the boycott of the contest hosted by Israel, as part of the ongoing BDS movement.
Over 100 LGBTQ+ groups have also joined the campaign, as well as hundreds of artists including former Eurovision contestants, and the 1994 winner for Ireland, Charlie McGettigan.
In March, more than 100 Palestinian artists wrote an open letter appealing to all Eurovision finalists to withdraw, “to avoid participating in Israel’s explicit agenda of using international artists’ appearances to whitewash its crimes against humanity.”
26 Israeli artists also urged Eurovision contestants to cancel, saying in an open letter they “can’t sit silent as our Palestinian counterparts suffer silencing, dehumanization and violence”.
The Palestinian-led BDS movement was founded in 2005 with three aims: the end of Israel’s military occupation, full equality for Palestinians with Israeli citizenship, and the right of return for Palestinian refugees.
US President Donald Trump announced the creation of a “Gaza Peace Council” and called for the resistance to disarm as Phase Two of the US-backed Gaza plan began, a move that comes amid ongoing Israeli violations on the ground and growing doubts over the plan’s viability.
Pro-Israel Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said that the ADL was working with the FBI and actively monitoring people online. He listed out what online activity they were monitoring, as well as what he referred to as the "extremists" they were monitoring, including pro-Palestine and anti-genocide activists.
On October 10, the Israeli forces completed the first phase of withdrawal under the ceasefire deal to the “Yellow Line,” a non-physical demarcation line separating the Israeli occupation forces from certain areas of Gaza, while occupying roughly 53 percent of the Strip.