World Cup
News USA

Why Eurovision’s fallout over Israel may change the competition

Moments after Austria overtook Israel to win last May’s Eurovision Song Contest and in doing so won the right to host this year’s event, UK viewers heard commentator Graham Norton say organisers “will be breathing the largest sigh of relief that they’re not faced with a Tel Aviv final next year”.

Anti-Israel protests had built ahead of the contest. At a demonstration of several hundred people in Basel, Switzerland, where the final was held, protesters wore the Palestinian flag and smeared themselves with fake blood to symbolise the killings in Gaza. During the grand final the Israeli singer Yuval Raphael was targeted when two people attempted to storm the stage, and threw paint which ended up hitting a Eurovision crew member.

The atmosphere in the arena as the results came in was easily the most tense I’ve experienced in my years of reporting on the song contest. People were praying. Some were crying. There were chants of “Austria, Austria” as the audience awaited the final scores.