Eurovision braces for new protests over Israel’s participation | AJ #shorts

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Eurovision braces for new protests over Israel’s participation | AJ #shorts

Eurovision Erupts: Israel's Participation Sparks Fresh Protests and Mass Withdrawals

This week, the Eurovision Song Contest is teetering on the edge of outright chaos. Organizers are scrambling to contain demonstrations as Israel's contestant Noah Bettan advances toward the grand final. Chants of "stop the genocide" rang out loud and clear during the semi-final performance just hours ago. Five countries have already pulled out entirely, slamming the door on what they call a politically poisoned spectacle.

The backlash is not fading. It is intensifying. And the spin from Eurovision bosses—that this is simply about "music and unity"—rings hollow when the evidence of selective outrage and selective participation stares everyone in the face.

Protests Hit the Stage in Real Time

During Noah Bettan's semi-final set, audience members did not stay silent. They chanted. They disrupted. Security scrambled while cameras tried to cut away. This was not a one-off heckle. It was a coordinated wave of dissent that has been building for weeks.

As of today, the situation is worse. Organizers admit they are bracing for larger demonstrations at the grand final. That tells you everything. They knew this would happen, yet they still green-lit Israel's entry while other nations walked away in protest.

The five withdrawals are not abstract. They represent real diplomatic fractures. Countries that once saw Eurovision as harmless entertainment have now drawn a hard line. The message is blunt: if Israel competes, we will not.

The Spin Machine Goes Into Overdrive

Eurovision officials keep repeating the tired line that politics has no place in the contest. That claim collapsed years ago. It collapsed again this week when the same organizers allowed Israel to perform while ignoring the very real human cost unfolding in Gaza. Selective blindness is not neutrality—it is complicity dressed up as rules.

Critics are right to point out the hypocrisy. Russia was barred quickly when its actions drew international condemnation. Israel receives a pass. The double standard is glaring, and the public sees it.

Meanwhile, the chants of "stop the genocide" are being framed by some outlets as mere disruption. They are not. They are the sound of a generation refusing to let entertainment whitewash ongoing violence. Dismissing them as fringe noise is the laziest form of spin.

What Happens at the Grand Final?

The contest heads into its finale with fractures widening by the hour. Security will be tighter. Broadcast cuts will be faster. Yet the underlying tension will remain. Viewers across Europe and beyond are watching to see whether the show can survive its own contradictions.

Five nations have already voted with their feet. More pressure is mounting on others to follow. Sponsors are nervous. Broadcasters are fielding complaints. The supposed celebration of European unity is exposing how divided the continent actually is on this issue.

The Bigger Picture No One Wants to Admit

Eurovision was never just about catchy songs. It has always been a soft-power arena. Allowing Israel to compete while the death toll in Gaza climbs sends a message that some countries' actions are above scrutiny. That message is now being rejected in real time, on stage, in the audience, and by entire delegations.

The protests are not going away. If anything, the grand final will amplify them. Organizers can tighten security and edit footage, but they cannot erase the fact that five countries have already said no.

This is not about hating a performer. Noah Bettan is caught in a larger storm. The real target is the decision to treat Israel as just another participant while the rest of the world watches a humanitarian catastrophe unfold.

The Bottom Line

Eurovision is facing its most serious legitimacy crisis in years. The protests are current, the withdrawals are real, and the grand final is hours from becoming a global flashpoint. Pretending otherwise is pure spin.

The contest can either confront the political reality it helped create or watch its reputation crumble further in front of millions. Right now, the latter looks far more likely.

This is Jessica Ali for Global 1 News. 🔥

Source: Al Jazeera via YouTube — 2026-05-15T00:33:06+00:00.

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