Swiss singer Nemo’s decision follows boycott announcements by a host of EU nations
Swiss singer Nemo announced on Thursday that he is returning his 2024 Eurovision Song Contest trophy in protest over Israel’s continued participation in the competition.
Nemo, who won last year’s contest with the song ‘The Code’, said on Thursday that the trophy “no longer belongs on my shelf.”
“Eurovision says it stands for unity, for inclusion and dignity for all people,” Nemo said in a social media post, adding that Israel’s participation during what the UN’s Independent International Commission of Inquiry said is a genocide shows “a clear conflict” with those principles.
The singer said he would send the trophy back to the European Broadcasting Union’s (EBU) headquarters in Geneva and urged the organization to “live what you claim.”
According to Nemo, he is not protesting artists or fans but how the contest has been “used to soften the image of a state accused of severe wrongdoing.”
His protest follows decisions by several public broadcasters to withdraw from the Eurovision Song Contest 2026 after the EBU declined to remove Israel from the competition. They cited the war in Gaza and allegations of voting manipulation during the 2025 contest, which some networks argued boosted Israel’s result.
Eurovision organizers have insisted that Israel meets the contest requirements and will remain eligible to compete in 2026. The EBU has introduced new rules aimed at limiting political or government influence over entries and voting after repeated disputes related to the Gaza conflict.
Earlier, Spain, Ireland, Slovenia, Iceland, and the Netherlands said they will boycott the next Eurovision Song Contest after Israel was cleared to take part.
Israel has rejected accusations of genocide since launching its assault on Gaza after Hamas made a deadly incursion into southern Israel in October 2023, killing 1,200 people and taking 250 hostage. Gaza’s authorities say Israel’s response has killed nearly 70,000 Palestinians.
The 2026 Eurovision Song Contest is scheduled to take place in Vienna in May, following Austria’s victory this year.
The EBU has banned Russia from Eurovision since 2022, citing the Ukraine conflict. Moscow responded by launching its own annual song competition, Intervision, which debuted in September.
