Western powers recognise Palestinian state, drawing Israeli fury

LONDON: Britain, Australia, Canada and Portugal have formally recognised the State of Palestine in a historic shift in Western foreign policy that has drawn swift anger from Israel.

While Palestinians in the besieged Gaza Strip welcomed the recognition as a victory, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu responded furiously by vowing that a Palestinian state would never come to pass.

Other countries including France are due to follow suit during the annual UN General Assembly opening on Monday in New York.

Israel faces mounting international pressure over its war in Gaza, which has sparked a dire humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian territory.

Netanyahu denounced the push for recognition as absurd, claiming it would endanger Israel’s existence.

He stated that no Palestinian state would be established west of the Jordan River.

The Israeli premier later vowed to expand Jewish settlements in the West Bank, which Israel has controlled since 1967 in an occupation considered illegal under international law.

Netanyahu spoke after UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said Britain was formally recognising the State of Palestine to revive the hope of peace for Palestinians and Israelis through a two-state solution.

The UK and Canada became the first members of the Group of Seven advanced economies to take this step.

This represents a watershed moment for Palestinians and their ambitions for statehood, with the most powerful Western nations having long argued recognition should only come as part of a negotiated peace deal with Israel.

Three-quarters of UN members now recognise the State of Palestine, with at least 145 of the 193 member countries having done so according to an AFP tally.

Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the move recognises the legitimate and long held aspirations of the people of Palestine.

Portuguese Foreign Minister Paulo Rangel called the two-state solution the only path to a just and lasting peace.

Many in Gaza saw recognition as an affirmation of their existence after nearly two years of war between Israel and Palestinian Islamist group Hamas.

Salwa Mansour, who has been displaced from Rafah to Al-Mawasi, described the recognition as showing the world is finally starting to hear Palestinian voices.

She added that despite all the pain, death and massacres they’re living through, Palestinians cling to anything that brings even the smallest bit of hope.

Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas hailed the recognitions as an important and necessary step toward achieving a just and lasting peace.

Although largely symbolic, the move puts the four countries at odds with the United States and Israel.

US President Donald Trump said last week after talks with Starmer that one of their few disagreements was over Palestinian statehood.

French President Emmanuel Macron insisted that despite France moving to extend recognition, releasing the hostages Hamas captured in 2023 would be a requirement before opening an embassy in Palestine.

A growing number of longtime Israeli allies have shifted their positions as Israel has intensified its Gaza offensive, which began with Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack.

The Gaza Strip has suffered vast destruction, with growing international outcry over the besieged coastal territory’s spiralling death toll and a UN-declared famine.

The UK government has come under increasing public pressure to act, with thousands of people rallying every month on the streets.

Britain was pivotal in laying the groundwork for the creation of the State of Israel through the 1917 Balfour Declaration.

Starmer said Britain was acting in the face of the growing horror in the Middle East.

He renewed calls for a ceasefire and again demanded Hamas release the remaining Israeli hostages.

Branding Hamas a brutal terror organisation, Starmer also confirmed plans to bolster sanctions on the militants while denying recognition was a reward.

Hamas’s attack on southern Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally of official figures.

Israel’s retaliatory campaign has killed at least 65,208 people, also mostly civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza, which the UN considers reliable.

Many obstacles remain before statehood, including determining who would run the territory. – AFP

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