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Eurovision host Sweden braces for anti-Israel protests
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Eurovision host Sweden braces for anti-Israel protests

Reuters

MALMO—Sweden said it plans to host a dazzling Eurovision Song Contest, watched by 200 million people worldwide, but visitors face heightened security amid planned protests over Israel’s participation and a new geopolitical backdrop since Sweden joined the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (Nato).

The contest, the world’s biggest of its kind, takes place in Malmo from May 7 to May 11 and is expected to draw 100,000 visitors to Sweden’s third-largest city which has a large Muslim population. Organizers plan a special tribute to Swedish pop group ABBA, who won Eurovision 50 years ago this year. The European Broadcasting Union (EBU), which organizes the contest, has resisted calls for Israel to be excluded due to its war in Gaza.

Controversy over the conflict has already hit various cultural events across Europe. Much focus is expected to be on Israeli contestant Eden Golan and her song “Hurricane,” as multiple large pro-Palestinian protests are planned outside the venue in Malmo.

Israel was permitted to compete after it agreed to modify the lyrics of its original song “October Rain,” which the EBU said made reference to the Oct. 7 Hamas onslaught in Israel.

EBU brands Eurovision a nonpolitical event and insists that the contest is between public service broadcasters, not governments.

Still, it banned Russia in 2022 from Eurovision after several European public broadcasters called for the country to be expelled following its invasion of Ukraine.

Sweden is hosting the annual competition for the seventh time, after Swedish singer Loreen won last year’s competition in Liverpool with her song “Tattoo.”

The favorite

Ebba Adielsson, executive Eurovision producer from Swedish broadcaster SVT, promised “some smashing shows.” She ruled out an ABBA reunion, but said the event would celebrate the group’s 1974 win with their song “Waterloo,” a victory that launched the band onto the international stage.

FILE PHOTO: Swedish pop group Abba: Benny Andersson, Anni-Frid Lyngstad, Agnetha Faltskog and Bjorn Ulvaeus pose after winning the Swedish branch of the Eurovision Song Contest with their song “Waterloo”, February 9, 1974. Picture taken February 9, 1974. Olle Lindeborg/TT News Agency/via REUTERS/File Photo

Swiss contestant Nemo is the favorite to win this year, according to bookmakers, followed by Croatia’s Baby Lasagna, Joost Klein of the Netherlands and Italy’s Angelina Mango.

Visitors from 89 countries expected in Malmo will have to pass through airport-like security checks when entering venues around the city.

“There’s a high threat level combined with a lot of people,” said Per-Erik Ebbestahl, Malmo’s security director.

Organizers face the risk of protests escalating into violence, heightened terror threats in the country, and increased tensions with Russia after Sweden’s Nato membership.

In central Malmo, there are official posters for Eurovision, but also protest banners replicating the same colorful design, with the word Eurovision replaced by “genocide” and the words: “Israel out of Eurovision or Eurovision out of Malmo.”

Orwa Kadoura, a Palestinian living in Malmo and one of the organizers of the protests, said the Israeli delegation was “here to represent Israel and their government, which is committing acts of genocide right now.”

Tighter security

Israel rejects any accusation of genocide in Gaza during its war against Hamas.

Police say security will be tighter compared with when Sweden last hosted the event in 2016.

“The situation around the world is complex, and also the security for Sweden is different,” said Petra Stenkula, Malmo police chief. “We are ready for anything that can happen.”

Sweden joined Nato in March, two years after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine forced it to rethink its national security policy. Russia has threatened to take unspecified “political and military-technical countermeasures” in response.

Gang crime in Sweden’s biggest cities, including Malmo, has also been a problem for years, fueled by the drug trade.

Eurovision begins on May 7 with the first semifinal, followed by a second semifinal two days later and the final on May 11. —Reuters


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