Amnesty International was among the groups accusing Airbnb of enabling human rights violations on Wednesday after the company reversed its decision to ban listings of illegal Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank.
Back in November the San Francisco-based company announced that it would no longer offer some 200 listings of Jewish settlements in the West Bank, viewing settlements as “at the core of the dispute between Israelis and Palestinians.”
The removal followed pressure from the Stolen Homes coalition to drop the listings and triggered lawsuits by some Jewish Americans and Israeli settlers.
Airbnb’s u-turn was announced in statement Tuesday, which says that the company “has always opposed the BDS movement.” The change of stance, the company said, was to bring an end to the lawsuits.
“Under the settlement terms, Airbnb will not move forward with implementing the removal of listings in the West Bank from the platform,” the company said.
That decision, said Amnesty International’s business and human rights researcher Mark Dummett, is “a reprehensible and cowardly move that will be another devastating blow for the human rights of Palestinians.”
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