@Nino381 Airbnb has announced the position it's taking on the matter:
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/all-things-are-on-the-table-airbnb-ceo-on-future-in-russia-223529958....
https://news.airbnb.com/help-ukraine/
The existing economic sanctions are likely to thwart international transfers through Russian bank accounts, which will affect many Russia-based users regardless of any direct intervention from Airbnb. But it would be incredibly shortsighted and cruel for AIrbnb to unilaterally blacklist individual members on the basis of their nationality. Millions of people who happen to be Russian citizens have close friends and family members in Ukraine, and travel services like Airbnb will be instrumental in helping them reunite in an extremely traumatic time. And users who identify as Russian happen to be based in dozens of countries, have nothing to do with the war, and there is no logical reason to take any action against them personally.
I think there is currently a strong practical case for Airbnb terminating transactions that run through Russian banks, which will unfortunately have an impact on innocent guests and hosts. But "block Russian users" sounds like a tactic based purely on ethnic animosity, which is not an approach that guides us toward peace. There is no possible way for this crisis to have anything but a horrific end, if we all swallow the poison of regarding our fellow civilians as the enemy.