Entertainment

Russia barred from Eurovision contest over Ukraine invasion

Russia will not be allowed to participate in the final of this year's Eurovision song contest, the organizer said on Friday, after Ukraine and several other European public broadcasters called for Russia to be expelled.

European Broadcasting Union says Russia's inclusion would bring contest into 'disrepute'

Maneskin, from Italy, celebrate with the trophy after winning the Eurovision song contest in Rotterdam, Netherlands on May 22, 2021. The European Broadcasting Union says that no Russian act will appear in this year's contest. (Peter Dejong/The Associated Press)

 Russia will not be allowed to participate in the final of this year's Eurovision song contest, the organizer said on Friday, after Ukraine and several other European public broadcasters called for Russia to be expelled.

"The decision reflects concern that, in the light of the unprecedented crisis in Ukraine, the inclusion of a Russian entry in this year's contest would bring the competition into disrepute," the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) said in a statement.

Finland said Friday it would not send contestants to the final if Russia was allowed to participate. Public broadcasters in Ukraine, Sweden, Denmark, the Netherlands, Lithuania and Norway had also all urged the EBU to expel Russia.

Russian military forces on Thursday began an invasion of neighbouring Ukraine, prompting the imposition of economic sanctions by Western powers, as well as the withdrawal of major international sporting events from Russia.

WATCH | Government officials worry Russia moving to overthrow Ukraine's government: 

Government officials worry Russia moving to overthrow Ukraine's government

3 years ago
Duration 6:59
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky says he is staying put in Kyiv, even as Russian troops close in. Lawmakers have been given assault rifles to help defend the country's parliament, if it comes to that.

The Eurovision final, one of the world's largest televised events, takes place in Turin, Italy, on May 14.

Russia, which had yet to put forward a contestant this year, has participated 23 times since its first appearance in 1994 and won the contest in 2008.

The chairman of Ukraine's public broadcasting company Suspilne, Mykola Chernotytsky, wrote to the EBU to say that "Russia's participation, as an aggressor and violator of international law, in this year's Eurovision undermines the very idea of the competition."

He said Russia's state broadcaster was a "leading element of the Russian government's information war against Ukraine."

Russia was one of the favourites for the competition in 2016. But Ukraine took the title when Crimean Tatar Susana Jamaladinova, known as Jamala, unexpectedly won with a song about Soviet leader Joseph Stalin's deportation of hundreds of thousands of people from her Black Sea homeland, two years after Russia annexed the territory.

The following year, as host of the finals, Ukraine barred Russia's entry from entering. This year, Ukraine will be represented by Kalush Orchestra, which organizers describe as a "hip-hop band with a fondness for folk."
 

With files from The Associated Press