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Eurovision festivities open in Vienna in a climate altered by the boycott around Israel

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The opening ceremony begins this Sunday with a parade of 35 delegations from the countries participating in the competition. Hundreds of police officers will be mobilized in the Austrian capital until the final on May 16.

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Eurovision festivities open in Vienna in a climate altered by the boycott around Israel

Eurovision 2026 posters in Vienna, Austria bearing the words “United by Music” in English. (VALERIE GAGET FRANCEINFO CULTURE)

The festivities surrounding the Eurovision Song Contest begin this Sunday, May 10 in Vienna with thousands of fans from around the world, despite a call for a boycott launched due to the presence of Israel. The Austrian capital is pulling out all the stops to host the 70th edition of the most popular TV show on the planet: it has planned a multitude of off-site events for tourists and locals, until the final on May 16.

In the afternoon, she rolls out the carpet, which at Eurovision is not red but turquoise, to welcome a parade of 35 delegations from the participating countries, as part of a colorful opening ceremony scheduled from 2 p.m. local time (12 p.m. GMT). On the program: the best (and worst) of the previous seven decades, on a giant screen, facing the neogothic town hall, on a square transformed into a secure area, reserved for fans.

Today, the competition reaches more than 170 million people on television and online worldwide, and its content generates billions of views across digital platforms. Finland, big favorite this year according to online bettors, hopes to win with a duet combining singer Pete Parkkonen and violinist Linda Lampenius.

The European Broadcasting Union (EBU) has made an exception and the musician will be able to perform live, according to the press in the Nordic country. Instruments are usually pre-recorded. Greece, Denmark, France and Australia are also well placed, with star Delta Goodrem having benefited from public funding from Canberra to support cultural diplomacy. The Israeli candidate, Noam Bettan, could also do well with a title partially interpreted in the language of Molière.

Because of Israel’s participation, broadcasters from Spain, Ireland, Iceland, the Netherlands and Slovenia announced their defection. They accuse Israel of conducting the devastating war waged in Gaza in retaliation for the attack, on October 7, 2023, of the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas on its soil.

More than a thousand artists or groups also called for a boycott, including Peter Gabriel and Massive Attack, and in France, the CGT Entertainment Federation relayed their open letter. Pro-Palestinian, but also pro-Israeli, demonstrations are planned in Vienna. The German Minister of Culture, Wolfram Weimer, who announced his arrival, declared to the media Augsburger Allgemeine that the call for a boycott had done it “suffer”. “I committed myself very early on so that Israel could sing and I took this cause to the highest political level. I am happy that Israel can now sing and so I am leaving for Vienna, where I rejoice in the event” he said.

In order to prevent any slippage, the event is placed under very high security and several hundred police officers will be mobilized every day in the Austrian capital until the final on Saturday May 16.

Germany, France, Italy and the United Kingdom, which pay the largest financial contribution, are guaranteed to be included. Austria will also definitely be on stage, because the local artist, JJ, won the previous edition. But this year, its candidate, Cosmo, is relegated by the forecasts to the bottom of the ranking.

France is represented this year by Monroe, a young Franco-American lyrical artist. The singer Louane, who was among the favorites last year, came in 7th place in the final ranking, with the song Maman.