San Francisco, CA - Airbnb plans to maintain its boycott of West Bank settlements, but has decided to delist vacation rentals from South Ossetia and Abhkazia, two contested autonomous areas in the state of Georgia.

The global vacation rental website has been under fire since its November decision to drop listings from West Bank settlements.

At the time the company stated that the move was part of the company’s new global framework for disputed territories.

Critics pushed back at that argument because the West Bank settlements were the only disputed territory to which Airbnb had applied the policy.

The policy solely targeted Israelis living in settlements and had not been applied to Palestinians in the West Bank. 

Israel had pushed Airbnb to reconsider its decision. But instead of reinstating the listings, Airbnb posted on its website that it was applying the policy to other regions in dispute.

“Airbnb had concerns that because homes — the core of the Airbnb business — are a central element of the dispute among stakeholders in South Ossetia and Abkhazia, Airbnb’s listings could be implicated in ongoing tensions. In applying the global framework to these disputed territories, Airbnb determined that the existence of the listings in these disputed territories has a direct connection to the larger conflict in the region,” it stated on its website.

It added that it was considering delisting properties in other areas of territorial disputes.

“We continue to review other areas of the world that are the subject of disputes and will provide updates as appropriate,” the company stated.

It noted that was still in the process of removing the listings and that more work needed to be done to determine which properties in those areas it planned to delist.

“We are working with experts to develop and validate the means to implement our policy. For example, we must appropriately identify the precise boundaries of the areas subject to our policy and ensure that our technological solutions attend to the relevant details,” Airbnb said.

Professor Eugene Kontorovich, Director of International Law at the Jerusalem-based Kohelet Policy Forum, said that Airbnb’s boycott of West Bank settlements was discriminatory, even though it expanded its boycott list to include other disputed regions

“Airbnb’s attempt to put a fig leaf on their anti-Jewish discrimination actually only accentuates the extent of their discrimination in relation to Israel. Read more at JPost