The 2024 Swiss Eurovision champ, Nemo, has decided to give the Eurovision trophy back to the EBU in protest of Israel’s participation in the competition, they made the announcement today with a statement on their official Instagram account.

In the wake of the latest developments surrounding the Eurovision Song Contest, the geopolitical scenario in the Middle East, Israel’s participation at Eurovision 2026 and the withdrawals from the competition, Nemo the Swiss Eurovision winner has decided to give back their trophy to the EBU.

 

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Una publicación compartida de Nemo (@nemothings)

Nemo posted the following statement via Instagram:

 

Ver esta publicación en Instagram

 

Una publicación compartida de Nemo (@nemothings)

 

Nemo’s statement reads:

Last year I won Eurovision and with it I was awarded the trophy.

And even though I’m immensely grateful for the community around this contest and everything this experience has taught me both as a person and artist, today I no longer feel this trophy belongs on my shelf.

Eurovision says it stands for unity, inclusion, and dignity for all. Those values made this contest meaningful to me.

But Israel’s continued participation, during what the UN’s Independent International Commission of Inquiry has concluded to be a genocide, shows a clear conflict between those ideals and the decisions made by the EBU.

This is not about individuals or artists.

The contest was repeatedly used to soften the image of a state accused of severe wrongdoing, all while the EBU insisted Eurovision is “non-political.”

And when entire countries withdraw over this contradiction, it should be clear that something is deeply wrong.

That’s why I’ve decided that I’m sending my trophy back to the EBU headquarters in Geneva.
With gratitude and with a clear message:

Live what you claim.

If the values we celebrate onstage aren’t lived offstage, then even the most beautiful songs lose their meaning.

I’m waiting for the moment those words and actions align.

Until then, this trophy is yours.

Nemo


Sanjay (Sergio) joined esctoday.com in December 2006 as an editor. He was appointed as the Head of Press of ESCToday.com in 2011. Hereafter in 2016 he was promoted as the Head of International Relations & Communications at ESCToday. Sergio has covered the Eurovision Song Contest live 23 times since 2000, having worked for several international magazines and media outlets.