Eurovision Protester Speaks Out After Viral Clip Sparks Anger Over Security 'Aggression'
The protesters who were removed from this year's Eurovision final have spoken out after a video of one of them being roughly handled by the event's security time was widely shared on social media.
Eurovision bosses have confirmed that two people were removed from the arena in Basel, Switzerland on Saturday night, after they 'tried to get over a barrier onto the stage' during the Israeli act's performance.
A spokesperson explained: 'One of the two agitators threw paint and a crew member was hit. The crew member is fine and nobody was injured.
'The man and the woman were taken out of the venue and handed over to the police.'
A video appearing to show one of them being accosted by security has accrued hundreds of thousands of views on X at the time of writing, with many criticising the team member's heavy-handed approach.
Eurovision security assaulting a demonstrator to protect their genocide barbie on stage #escpic.twitter.com/43J7kx10pI
— Shukri Lawrence (@wifiridershukri) May 17, 2025
The pair – who have identified themselves as David and Meaghan from the activism group Youth Demand – posted their own video on Sunday evening.
In the two-minute video, Meaghan said that they had taken action 'against Israeli participation, and, most importantly, the Israeli genocide'.
'Naturally, I was terrified in the build-up to this action, I'd been anxious for weeks,' she explained. 'But, all that gives me strength is knowing that we did this for the people of Palestine, and that grounds me.'
David – who was featured in the viral clip – continued: 'Just before the Israeli performer came on, a load of extra security was rolled out, so our plan slightly went out of the window.
'But regardless, we still hopped over the barrier and attempted to disrupt the performance in whatever non-violent means we could. On the other side of the barrier, we were faced with pretty grim aggression from the security, Eurovision staff and then, later on, the police.'
He added: 'Understandably, we've seen a lot of anger about this aggression, which we appreciate and understand. However, we ask that people direct this anger towards the Israeli State, which is still committing a genocide in Palestine [...] and also to the British government, who are actively arming this, despite the fact that the majority of the British public are against arming Israel. It's a complete joke, and that's where our anger should be focussed.'
📢 HEAR FROM MEAGHAN AND DAVID WHO DISRUPTED ISRAEL'S EUROVISION PERFORMANCELast night, Meaghan and David jumped the barriers during Israel's performance at the live Eurovision finale to attempt to run on the stage. Security was seen on a shocking viral video assaulting them.… pic.twitter.com/mP7YWRcrMw
— Youth Demand (@youth_demand) May 18, 2025
HuffPost UK has contacted Eurovision for comment.
A spokesperson for the Swiss police previously said that it would be up to the contest's organisers to determine whether they wanted to press charges against the two demonstrators.
Israel's involvement in Eurovision has been a contentious issue for a number of years due to the conflict in Gaza, with the Palestine-led BDS movement calling for a boycott in the last two years.
This year, Israel was represented by Yuval Raphael, a survivor of the October 2023 terrorist attack by Hamas at the Nova music festival.
Yuval and the Israeli delegation were met with jeers from protesters upon their arrival at the official Eurovision launch earlier this month, with Israel's public broadcaster Kan later making an official complaint to Swiss police after an alleged threatening gesture was made towards her by someone in the cwrod.
Speaking to BBC News, Yuval said last week that this first day of Eurovision had been 'frightening, even at times uncomfortable' and like her predecessor, Eden Golan, she maintained a low profile in the days before her semi-final performance, doing only a handful of media appearances and interviews.
She also claimed she was 'expecting' boos, and had been preparing for a variety of distractions during her rehearsals.
It was later revealed that six pro-Palestine protesters were removed from the arena after attempting to disrupt Yuval's dress rehearsal before the Eurovision semi-finals on Thursday.
Yuval finished in second place on Saturday night behind Austria's JJ, although Israel did manage to secure the most points from Eurovision televoters.
This Is Why This Year's Eurovision Song Contest Was So Controversial Once Again
'I Was Never As Overwhelmed As I Was At Eurovision': Former Winner Nemo Reflects On Their 'Whirlwind' Experience
Remember Monday Speak Out On Their Eurovision Experience After Getting Zero Points From Viewers
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Elle
10 minutes ago
- Elle
Cara Delevingne's Festival Guide: 'If I'm Doing A Movie, I Put Having Glastonbury Weekend Off In My Contract'
Missing a year of Glastonbury Festival would feel like missing a birthday for Cara Delevingne. The British model and actor prioritises a weekend on Worthy Farm so much so that she gets it written into job contracts that she's not available for the June dates. Non-negotiable. 'It's the festival I've been to the most and it's the one I will go to forever,' she tells ELLE UK from her Los Angeles home. FIND OUT MORE AT ELLE COLLECTIVE 'Missing a year makes me feel like I'm missing my own birthday. That's what it feels like it's. if I'm doing a movie or something, I'll always put it into a contract.' It makes sense that this festival fan is fronting Burberry's latest campaign, which champions Britain's long-standing love affair of days spent outdoors listening to music, from Glastonbury to Green Man. 'I grew up going to festivals and I grew up doing Burberry. I feel really grateful and very honoured to be in the campaign,' she admits. 'Burberry are just the loveliest people to work for and work with. It's always been that way. So, to come back to it, it's like coming home.' Delevingne isn't alone as the Burberry line-up includes Liam Gallagher, Loyle Carner, Alexa Chung, and Lennon Gallagher, Molly Moorish-Gallagher and Gene Gallagher amongst it. 'It was honestly very surreal. It was like we're at a festival, but where you can play your own music,' Delevingne says of the impressive backdrop that echoes classic imagery of candid festival moments. 'It was kind of ideal. Sometimes when you're on shoots and they're like 'smile', and you have to force it, but this was actually me just having a f*cking blast.' Delevingne appears in three looks in the campaign, made up of a consortium of festival-ready pieces that would easily fit into her own wardrobe. There was one piece that did travel home that day. 'Don't worry I was honest and said that I'm taking it. I do not wear skirts a lot, but it's a Burberry kilt,' she shares. 'I remember showing up to my sister's birthday in this kilt a couple of days later, and everyone looked at me because they hadn't seen me in a skirt since I was forced to wear one. I would never choose to wear a skirt, but a kilt is different. I am definitely taking with me for festivals.' Festival memories run deep for Cara, but there's something about her first time attending in the summer she was 15 that stands out most. 'I think the first time going to a festival is just always the most insane thing.' 'The first time I went to Glastonbury someone's ticket was fake and we had to break someone in. Six of us were sleeping in a three-man pop-up tent, and it was absolute chaos. It felt like a real pilgrimage to find where we were going and to find our friends. And then finally you get there. I miss that part of festivals, obviously, maybe not the camping, but yes, squeezing everything in a pop-up tent. But I miss how hard it is to get it sorted and to get it done. When things are so hard, it does make the payoff so much better.' Now in her early thirties things have changed. 'My back can't handle it,' she laughs. 'Also, being sober is so different at a festival. They tell you when you get sober that you won't feel like sh*t the next day, but you do because you stay up late. Anyways, I'm just old now and if go to sleep too late you just feel like ass.' While the idea of a festival usually conjures images of massive sound systems set amongst otherwise peaceful green fields, there is so much more variety than this un the UK, whether it's Notting Hill Carnival or Pride. 'I try to live proudly all year round,' Delevingne says. 'Queer people are just the most not eccentric as such, but also just the most creative. There's no trying to be normal, which I feel like when you live suppressing something for so long, when you finally live freely and live who you are, you want to just be the most yourself you've ever been and I think that comes out in a way that queer people celebrate each other and celebrate being queer, because it really is all or nothing.' As Pride month takes hold, Delevingne admits that this could be one of the most crucial in our lifetime so far. 'It seems throughout history that you take two steps forward and take three steps back. And I think that in these moments when we're being pushed back, we really just have to keep pushing forward and keep being represented and representing ourselves. That to me is the most important thing.' 'Okay, so I have a few essentials that I always bring now I'm a bit older, one is a camel pouch. It's small, it's sleek, you can put it under your jacket, just so you can have water wherever you go, shove electrolytes in there, whatever works. I also always bring a head torch. I think there's something about getting lost in the dark when I was at Glastonbury in the first year, there's slightly traumatised me for life, because I bring a head torch wherever I go. Even if I go on holiday, I always bring one. I never think it's a problem wearing the same thing twice at Glastonbury, just as long as you cover all bases, of, like, an umbrella that can be used in the rain or the sun. It doesn't usually rain, but you need to be prepared. I don't like wellies unless it's raining. I do a lot of walking, and I like to move very far around the festival in a day. So, I prefer hiking shoes. ELLE Collective is a new community of fashion, beauty and culture lovers. For access to exclusive content, events, inspiring advice from our Editors and industry experts, as well the opportunity to meet designers, thought-leaders and stylists, become a member today HERE. Freelancer


Bloomberg
18 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Musk Seeks to ‘Kill' Tax Bill, Trump Signs New Travel Ban
Elon Musk is on a mission to block President Donald Trump's tax bill after he tried — and failed — to convince Republican lawmakers to preserve valuable tax credits for electric vehicles in the legislation, according to a person familiar with the matter. President Donald Trump signed a proclamation that bans individuals from 12 countries from entering the US, reinstating one of the most controversial measures from his first term after an attack in Colorado that targeted an event supporting Israeli hostages. The Opening Trade has everything you need to know as markets open across Europe. With analysis you won't find anywhere else, we break down the biggest stories of the day and speak to top guests who have skin in the game. Hosted by Anna Edwards and Tom Mackenzie. (Source: Bloomberg)


Fox News
30 minutes ago
- Fox News
CNN's Christiane Amanpour afraid to travel to America as a foreigner, says it's like going to North Korea
British-born CNN journalist Christiane Amanpour revealed on her podcast "The Ex Files" on Wednesday that she recently prepared to travel to the U.S. as if she were traveling to North Korea. Speaking with her ex-husband Jamie Rubin, a former State Department official, Amanpour recalled a speech she gave at Harvard Kennedy School last month. Although she was a prominent media figure, she expressed fear that she would be stopped by border security. "I must say I was afraid," Amanpour said. "I'm a foreigner. I don't have a green card. I'm not an American citizen. I'm fairly prominent, and I literally prepared to go to America as if I was going to North Korea. I took a burner phone. Imagine that. I didn't take a single…not my mobile phone, not my iPad, nothing, and I had nothing on the burner phone except a few numbers." She added that she spoke to CNN security before her visit after hearing several anecdotes about her fellow British citizens being either detained for hours or turned around at the border. However, she found that she was welcomed into the country and that the immigration officer she met "could not have been nicer." "So, huge sigh of relief I breathed, but wow, can you imagine if I'm afraid, what do others think?" Amanpour said. Rubin argued that President Donald Trump's attempts to bar Harvard from accepting foreign students were only the latest attacks he's made against the country itself. "With Donald Trump's basically weaponization of the immigration and naturalization service to scrutinize people, to imagine that every single non-American is a threat to the United States, is a war on what our country has been since its founding," Rubin said. The podcast episode premiered hours before the Trump administration announced an executive order blocking travel to the U.S. from nearly 20 countries identified as "very high-risk" for terrorism, high visa overstay rates and other security concerns.