Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Airbnb officials visit Samaria amid controversy over rentals and settlement homes

Delegation led by vice president of short-term rental firm visits Samaria after vowing to delist rentals over opposition to Jewish settlements • Airbnb denies change of heart, as was earlier reported.

Airbnb Office. Credit: Open Grid Scheduler/Flickr.
Airbnb Office. Credit: Open Grid Scheduler/Flickr.

Senior officials from the home-rental company Airbnb toured the Barkan Industrial Park on Tuesday amid the ongoing controversy over its decision ban Jewish homes in Judea and Samaria from its online platform.

The tour was organized by the head of the Samaria Regional Council Yossi Dagan. The Barkan Industrial Park was the site of a deadly terrorist shooting in October, in which a Palestinian terrorist killed two Israeli co-workers and wounded a third.

The company announced its decision to delist some 200 homes in November because of their location—in an area that is “at the core of the dispute between the Israelis and Palestinians.”

The decision elicited widespread condemnation in Israel. In the United States, two states said they were looking into punitive measures against the company for potentially violating laws against boycotting Israel.

On Tuesday, Airbnb vice president Chris Lahan was among the company officials that visited Samaria. The two were shown the factory where the Barkan terrorist attack occurred.

The officials were briefed on the tourism industry in the area, as well as on the coexistence between Arabs and Jews in the industrial complex and elsewhere in Samaria.

“I told the delegation that I am glad they are engaged in dialogue with the Israeli government, and that I expect them to cancel their policy [against Jewish settlements],” Dagan said after the tour, adding that he expected that the company will “resume their activity in Judea and Samaria just like they operate everywhere else in our country.”

Dagan said he was “pleased to hear that they are against the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement against Israel, and we agreed that they would consider my request and that the dialogue will continue.”

Dagan vowed to “continue advocating for Samaria and against the BDS movement on all fronts.”

On Monday, the company expressed its “unequivocal rejection of the BDS movement” following a meeting with Tourism Minister Yariv Levin. However, the company said that the reports that it had reversed its policy on the settlements were “inaccurate.”

The Israeli PM said war crimes claims meant to deflect from misconduct allegations as ICC Chief Prosecutor Karim Khan faces suspension pending review.
Tehran must account for unverified enriched uranium and grant inspectors access to its nuclear stockpile and bombed sites, the board said.
“U.S. forces remain vigilant, lethal and ready,” said United States Central Command.
The Hollywood star did not defend Israel’s actions, but opposed the targeting of Nadav Lapid, who has accused the Jewish state of “genocide.”
Israel’s Mission to the E.U. and NATO says Jewish students increasingly face harassment, intimidation and attacks in academia.
The legislation removes the internal affairs unit responsible for investigating allegations of police misconduct from the State Attorney’s Office and establishes it as an independent body within the Israeli Justice Ministry.