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Israel Advances to Eurovision Amid Protests; Boy George Eliminated

Israel secured its spot in the Eurovision finals, sparking protests, while Culture Club singer Boy George, representing San Marino with Senhit, was eliminated in the semi-finals.

·May 13, 2026·via NME
Israel Advances to Eurovision Amid Protests; Boy George Eliminated

Israel have qualified for the final of Eurovision 2026 despite protests being heard during their performance, and Boy George has failed to make it through representing San Marino.

The first of the semi-finals was held yesterday (Tuesday May 12) ahead of the finale of the song contest taking place this weekend. There, it was confirmed that Israel would be taking part in the grand final, with their song ‘Michelle’ performed by 28-year-old Noam Bettan.

Their presence at the contest has been controversial in recent years due to the nation’s military action in Gaza, and multiple countries have pulled out of this year’s event in protest. The 70th edition will be held in Vienna on Saturday (May 16) and has already seen boycotts from Ireland, the Netherlands, Slovenia and Spain over Israel’s inclusion .

Reports have also emerged claiming that Israel’s government orchestrated a “well-organised campaign” to use the Eurovision Song Contest as a “soft power” tool.

During the semi-finals yesterday, Bettan received a mixed response from the audience, with some cheering the singer on while others booed and shouted anti-Israel slogans. As highlighted by The Independent , one person in particular could be heard for around a minute during the performance, saying “Stop the genocide” during the introduction to the song.

Austrian broadcaster ORF, which is hosting the show, confirmed ahead of time that it would not censor any negative reactions from the crowd to any participants. It also shared a joint statement with Eurovision organisers EBU after the semi-final about the heckles during Bettan’s performance.

They said that the audience member who was heard particularly loudly during the introduction stood “close to a microphone” and was “later removed by security for continuing to disturb the audience” (via BBC News ).

The statement also confirmed that “three other people were also removed from the arena by security for disruptive behaviour”.

In total, there were 10 countries that qualified for the finale last night: Israel, Belgium, Croatia, Finland, Greece, Lithuania, Moldova, Poland, Serbia and Sweden.

Those who did not qualify after performing and will not be progressing to the final were Estonia, Georgia, Montenegro, Portugal and San Marino.

The latter was represented by returning Eurovision performer Senhit, and also included a guest appearance from Culture Club singer Boy George.

Earlier this month, Boy George shared a video that saw him embracing Israel’s contestant, Noam Bettan, during rehearsals and wishing him luck ahead of the event.

The ‘Karma Chameleon’ singer also got involved in Eurovision in 2024, becoming was one of the famous faces who signed an open letter calling for Israel to remain part of the Eurovision Song Contest that year , with other high profile signees including Sharon Osbourne, Gene Simmons and Scooter Braun.

Other countries competing in the final of Eurovision 2026 include the four biggest financial contributors – France, Germany, Italy and the United Kingdom – who all qualify automatically.

Tomorrow night (Thursday May 14), 15 more countries will take part in a second semi-final, and 10 of which will progress to the finale and be in the running for the trophy.

The post Israel meet protests as they qualify for Eurovision, but Boy George fails to make it through appeared first on NME .

_Originally reported by [NME](https://www.nme.com/news/music/israel-meet-protests-as-they-qualify-for-eurovision-but-boy-george-fails-to-make-it-through-3945236?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=israel-meet-protests-as-they-qualify-for-eurovision-but-boy-george-fails-to-make-it-through)._

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This story is summarized from coverage by NME.

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