Rights groups accuse Airbnb over listings in illegal Israeli settlements


Money laundering complaint filed with UK's National Crime Agency one of a series of recent legal actions taken against travel company which denies wrongdoing

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Dania Akkad reports in Middle East Eye on 10 June 2025:

Rights groups have called for the UK’s National Crime Agency to investigate Airbnb over alleged money laundering offences they say it may have committed by listing holiday properties in Israeli settlements in occupied Palestinian territories.

Airbnb, according to two legal organisations which have brought the complaint, may have violated laws that make it an offence to handle money and property knowingly derived from criminal acts through its more than 300 listings in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

On Tuesday, the organisations – the UK-based Global Legal Action Network (Glan) and Palestinian human rights group Al-Haq – announced that they have filed a criminal complaint with the National Crime Agency over Airbnb’s UK subsidiary.

Airbnb is currently listed in the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights’ database of businesses involved in activities in Israeli settlements in the West Bank, East Jerusalem and the occupied Syrian Golan Heights.

The filed complaint, one of several coordinated efforts announced on Tuesday, comes after the International Court of Justice July 2024 ruling that Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territory is illegal.

“At a time when we are witnessing genocide in Palestine, businesses like Airbnb are providing services that deny the Palestinian people their means of subsistence, threatening the viability of the group,” said Shawan Jabarin, general director of Al-Haq.

“Following the finding by the International Court of Justice, that Israel’s occupation is illegal, business activities trading in goods and services that maintain the illegal occupation, must come to an end.”

In 2018, following a Human Rights Watch report which said that Airbnb’s listings in settlements were unlawful under international humanitarian law, the company said it would remove listings in the settlements.  But the company decision was reversed after legal action was brought in the US by hosts and guests of the listed properties, with Airbnb saying it would donate all proceeds from the rentals to humanitarian organisations.

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