LONDON: UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer is facing mounting pressure from his ministers to recognize a Palestinian state amid global condemnation of Israel’s conduct in Gaza.
A number of senior ministers in Starmer’s Cabinet have reportedly pushed the prime minister to take a leading international role in recognition at meetings in recent months, The Guardian reported.
The UK has long pledged to recognize a Palestinian state as part of a formal peace process between Palestinians and Israel, but only in tandem with other Western countries. The government, however, has reportedly suffered from a growing sense of desperation after the Israeli military killed scores of starving Palestinians queuing at food aid sites in Gaza.
One minister said: “We say that recognizing Palestinian statehood is a really important symbol that you can only do once. But if not now, then when?”
Almost 60 MPs from the ruling Labour Party earlier this month demanded that the UK immediately recognize Palestine as a state.
This came after Israel’s defense minister revealed plans to force all Gaza residents into a camp in the now-destroyed city of Rafah in the south of the strip.
French President Emmanuel Macron told the British Parliament on a visit this month that the two-state solution was “the only way” to resolve the Israel-Palestine conflict and bring regional peace.
Diplomats have said that Macron is facing resistance from allies in Britain and Canada over his position, however.
Later this month, a planned conference co-chaired by Ƶ and France will take place in New York City, aimed at rallying international support for the two-state solution.
The UK will “play its part” in a solution, David Lammy, the UK foreign secretary, has said.
“We said we wanted that to be part of a process. But we have had no process. What we have had is mayhem and conflict. There has been no process to attach that recognition to,” he told the BBC on Tuesday.
“Why do we say that? It’s because we don’t just want to recognize symbolically, we want to recognize as a way of getting to the two states that sadly many are trying to thwart at this point in time,” he added.
“But there is a live debate and discussion, and let me restate again my belief in two states, and two states in which Palestinians have their dignity and freedom, and Israel has its security for its people. We will do all we can to achieve that in time.”
Health Secretary Wes Streeting made a declaration in the House of Commons on Tuesday, calling for Palestinian recognition “while there’s still a state of Palestine left to recognize.”
It followed an Israeli attack on the staff residence of the World Health Organization in Gaza.
“I deplore Israel’s attacks on healthcare workers as well as other innocent civilians trying to access healthcare or vital aid,” he said.
“These actions go well beyond legitimate self-defense and undermine the prospects for peace.”
Streeting is believed to be among the ministers who have pushed for recognition of Palestine. Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood and Northern Ireland State Secretary Hilary Benn have also reportedly raised the issue.