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						Israeli minister urges Airbnb boycott, talks up rival 
						service
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		 [November 21, 2018]   
		By Dan Williams 
 JERUSALEM (Reuters) - An Israeli cabinet 
		minister called on Wednesday for a boycott of Airbnb and promoted one of 
		its rivals, escalating the government's response to the home-rental 
		company's decision to delist Israel's settlements in the occupied West 
		Bank.
 
 "I call today on all those who support Israel and oppose discriminatory 
		boycotts: they should cease using Airbnb and turn to other services," 
		Strategic Affairs Minister Gilad Erdan told a diplomatic conference 
		hosted by the Jerusalem Post newspaper.
 
 "By the way, Booking.com is a great service," added Erdan, the point-man 
		in Israeli government efforts to combat pro-Palestinian boycotts.
 
 Airbnb said on Monday it would remove some 200 settlement listings after 
		hearing criticism from people who "believe companies should not profit 
		on lands where people have been displaced”.
 
 Palestinians who want to establish an independent state taking in the 
		West Bank have welcomed the San Francisco-based firm’s move.
 
		 
		
 "Airbnb took a decision in the right direction to stop dealings with 
		Israeli settlements, consistent with international legitimacy," Wasel 
		Abu Youssef, a senior official with the umbrella Palestine Liberation 
		Organisation, told Reuters.
 
 "Erdan's incitement comes in the course of continued attempts by the 
		Israeli extremist government to intimidate companies, parties and 
		individuals who try to try to take good decisions that agree with 
		international resolutions."
 
 A spokesman for Airbnb declined comment on the Israeli minister's 
		remarks. In a statement emailed to Reuters on Tuesday, Chris Lehane, 
		Airbnb's global head of policy and communications, said: "Israel is a 
		special place and our over 22,000 hosts are special people who have 
		welcomed hundreds of thousands of guests to Israel.
 
 "We understand that this is a hard and complicated issue and we 
		appreciate everyone's perspective."
 
 
		
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			A woman talks on the phone at the Airbnb office headquarters in the 
			SOMA district of San Francisco, California, U.S., August 2, 2016. 
			REUTERS/Gabrielle Lurie 
            
			 
Airbnb's delisting applies only to Israeli settlements in the West Bank, where 
Palestinians have limited self rule under Israeli military occupation. It does 
not apply to Israel itself, or East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights, territories 
Israel has annexed without international recognition. Israel withdrew settlers 
from another Palestinian territory, the Gaza Strip, more than a decade ago.
 Human Rights Watch hailed Airbnb's delisting decision and, in a report on 
Tuesday, called on Booking.com to follow suit.
 
 Booking.com did not immediately response to Reuters emails seeking its response.
 
 Israeli Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked, addressing Wednesday's conference 
separately, backed Erdan's call to boycott Airbnb and suggested Israel also 
deploy its own anti-discrimination laws.
 
 Israel has said it would turn to the Trump administration and could back 
lawsuits against Airbnb within U.S. states that have legislated against 
anti-Israel boycotts.
 
 In Israel, one 2017 law empowers courts to award cash compensation to claimants 
who prove they have been denied goods or services because of where they live.
 
 "I checked yesterday with my office, with the attorney-general, whether we can 
operate this law, and the answer is positive," Shaked said. "We need to do 
anything we can in order to fight them back in order that they will change their 
decision."
 
 (Additional reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi; Editing by Jeffrey Heller and Peter 
Graff)
 
				 
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