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Eurovision host says it will not drown out any boos during Israel's performance

By Francois Murphy
By Francois Murphy
Dec 16, 2025
Director General of the Austrian broadcasting company ORF Roland Weissmann stands next to ORF executive producer Michael Kroen and Director of Programming at ORF Stefanie Groiss-Horowitz as they attend a press conference about the Eurovision Song Contest in Vienna, Austria, December 16, 2025. REUTERS/Lisa Leutner
Director General of the Austrian broadcasting company ORF Roland Weissmann stands next to ORF executive producer Michael Kroen and Director of Programming at ORF Stefanie Groiss-Horowitz as they attend a press conference about the Eurovision Song Contest in Vienna, Austria, December 16, 2025. REUTERS/Lisa Leutner — Lisa Leutner

By Francois Murphy

VIENNA, Dec 16 (Reuters) - The host broadcaster of the next Eurovision Song ​Contest, Austria's ORF, will not ban the ​Palestinian flag from the audience or drown out booing during Israel's performance as has happened ⁠at previous shows, organisers said on Tuesday.

The 70th edition of the contest in May will have just 35 entries, the smallest number of participants since 2003, after ​five national broadcasters including those of Spain, Ireland and the Netherlands ‍said they would boycott the show ​in protest at Israel's participation.

What is usually a celebration of national diversity, pop music and high camp has become embroiled in diplomatic strife, with those boycotting saying it would be unconscionable to take part given the number of civilians killed in ⁠Gaza as part of Israel's retaliation to the October 7 attack by Hamas in 2023.

"We will allow all official flags that exist in the world, if they comply with the law and are in a certain form - size, security risks, etc," the show's executive producer, Michael Kroen, told a news conference organised by ORF.

" ... we will not sugarcoat anything or avoid showing what is happening, because our task is to show things ​as they are," Kroen said.

AUSTRIA ⁠SUPPORTED ISRAEL PARTICIPATING

The broadcaster will not drown out the ⁠sound of any booing from the crowd, as happened this year during Israel's performance, ORF's director of programming Stefanie Groiss-Horowitz said.

"We won't play artificial applause over it at any point," she said.

Israel's 2025 entrant, Yuval Raphael, was at the Nova music festival that ‌was a target of the Hamas-led attack. The CEO of ​Israeli broadcaster KAN had likened the efforts to exclude Israel in 2026 to a form of "cultural boycott".

ORF and the Austrian government were among the biggest supporters of Israel participating over the objections of countries including Iceland and Slovenia, ‍which will also boycott the next contest in protest. ORF Director General Roland Weissmann visited Israel in November to show his support.

This year's show drew around 166 million ‌viewers, according to the European Broadcasting Union, more than the roughly 128 ‌million who Nielsen estimates watched the Super Bowl.

The war in Gaza began after Hamas-led militants killed 1,200 people, most of them civilians, and seized 251 hostages in an attack on southern Israel. Israel's retaliatory offensive has killed more than 70,700 Palestinians, most of them civilians, ⁠health officials in Gaza say.

(Reporting by Francois Murphy; Additional reporting by John Revill in Zurich; Editing by Alison Williams)