
Keir Starmer is facing calls as the crisis in Gaza intensifies (Picture: REX/Getty)
Sir Keir Starmer is coming under a lot of pressure to recognise Palestinian statehood.
He’s under pressure from 221 MPs – more than a third of all the people who sit in the House of Commons – who collectively signed a letter urging recognition.
He’s under pressure from Jeremy Corbyn’s newly announced left-wing party,which placed alleged UK complicity in the Gaza horror at the centre of its launch,and the significant number of supporters it has attracted.
And he’s under pressure from top Labour figures,ranging from London Mayor Sadiq Khan to members of his own cabinet,who are pushing him on the matter both publicly and privately.
Those calls have grown in the past few days,as images of starving children have been beamed around the world and French President Emmanuel Macron has announced France will formally recognise Palestine as a state.
But the Prime Minister has remained firm,insisting he will only press forward at the moment when the move would have the maximum impact.
Riyan Mansour,the Permanent Observer of Palestine at the UN (Picture: Lev Radin/Shutterstock)Today,147 of the UN’s 193 member states recognise Palestine,including the vast majority of the countries in Asia,Africa and South America.The UK,US,Canada,Germany,Japan,Australia and New Zealand are among the nations that do not.In 2014,MPs in the House of Commons voted to 274 to 12 in favour of recognising Palestine as a state.But David Cameron’s government responded with a line that remains familiar today – that recognition would wait until it was deemed most appropriate for the peace process.
Keir Starmer met Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa inside 10 Downing Street,in April (Picture: James Manning/POOL/AFP)Labour’s election manifesto last year said the party is ‘committed to recognising a Palestinian state as a contribution to a renewed peace process which results in a two-state solution with a safe and secure Israel alongside a viable and sovereign Palestinian state.’The letter signed by 221 MPs,organised by Labour’s Sarah Champion,said the announcement of recognition should come at a UN conference co-chaired by France and Saudi Arabia on Monday and Tuesday.It said: ‘British recognition of Palestine would be particularly powerful given its role as the author of the Balfour Declaration and the former Mandatory Power in Palestine. Since 1980 we have backed a two-state solution.‘Such a recognition would give that position substance as well as living up to a historic responsibility we have to the people under that Mandate.’United News - unews.co.za