At the UN, Trump condemns moves to recognise Palestinian state

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US President Donald Trump said the world should focus on securing the release of Israeli hostages held in Gaza by Hamas.

US President Donald Trump said the world should focus on securing the release of Israeli hostages held in Gaza by Hamas.

PHOTO: AFP

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NEW YORK/GAZA - US President Donald Trump told the United Nations on Sept 23 that he condemned moves by Western powers to recognise a Palestinian state, as the US appeared increasingly isolated in its staunch support of ally Israel.

In a speech to the UN General Assembly, Mr Trump said world powers should focus instead on securing the release of hostages held in Gaza, nearly

two years after Hamas seized them

in the deadly attack on Israel that triggered the Gaza war.

Israel has drawn global condemnation over its military conduct in Gaza, which has caused major destruction and where more than 65,000 Palestinians have been killed, according to local health authorities.

A global hunger monitor says part of the territory is

suffering from famine

.

France, Britain, Canada, Australia and Portugal are among the

countries that have recognised a Palestinian state

in the last few days.

Their moves were borne out of frustration with Israel over its offensive, and intended to promote a two-state solution, but have angered Israel and its close ally the US.

“As if to encourage continued conflict, some of this body is seeking to unilaterally recognise the Palestinian state. The rewards would be too great for Hamas terrorists, for their atrocities,” Mr Trump said in his speech at the UN.

Mr Trump later met leaders and officials from multiple Muslim-majority countries - Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Egypt, Jordan, Turkey, Indonesia and Pakistan - to discuss the situation in Gaza.

“It was a very successful meeting with all of the big players except for Israel, but that’s going to be next,” he said.

On Sept 22, Axios reported that in addition to freeing hostages and ending the war, Mr Trump was expected to discuss at the meeting US plans around an Israeli withdrawal and post-war governance in Gaza, without Hamas involvement.

Washington wants Arab and Muslim countries to agree to send military forces to Gaza to enable Israel’s withdrawal and to secure funding for transition and rebuilding programs, Axios reported.

After the meeting concluded on Sept 23, there was no immediate comment from the White House.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said the meeting was very fruitful and that a joint declaration would be published.

In recent weeks, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government has begun a

long-threatened ground assault

on Gaza City with few prospects for a ceasefire.

But Washington remains Israel’s staunchest ally.

It and Israel boycotted a summit in New York on Sept 22 convened by France and Saudi Arabia where dozens of world leaders gathered at the UN to embrace a Palestinian state.

No matter how many countries recognise Palestinian independence, full UN membership would require approval by the Security Council, where the US has a veto that it frequently uses to oppose resolutions that are critical of Israel.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres backed the moves for recognition while speaking at the Security Council later on Sept 23.

“This is the clearest path to a two-State solution: Israel and an independent, sovereign, democratic, viable and contiguous State of Palestine,” he said. “We must seize this momentum.”

France and Britain were due to host a meeting on Sept 23 with Germany and Italy, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt, Jordan, Canada and Australia to discuss a potential stabilisation force for Gaza, which would only happen after a ceasefire and would need a UN mandate.

Two-state solution is all but dead

The two-state solution - the existence of both Israel and a Palestinian state - was the bedrock of the US-backed peace process ushered in by the 1993 Oslo Accords, but the process has all but died.

The most right-wing government in Israel’s history has declared there will be no Palestinian state as it pushes on with its fight against militant group Hamas in Gaza following the October 7, 2023, attack on Israel that killed some 1,200 people, according to Israeli tallies.

It wants Hamas to hand over the last hostages it seized in the 2023 attack on Israel.

Pressing on with its Gaza City offensive to eliminate Hamas in Gaza, Israel’s military pushed deeper towards the most populated areas of Gaza City on Sept 23.

Local health authorities said Israeli fire on Sept 23 killed at least 22 people across the Gaza Strip, 18 of them in Gaza City, and the Gaza health ministry said hospitals in the enclave would run out of fuel in the coming few days, endangering lives.

A UN commission said in a report on Sept 23 that the Israeli government had shown a clear intent to establish permanent control over Gaza and to

ensure a Jewish majority in the occupied West Bank

.

The UN report details Israeli authorities’ extensive, systematic demolition of civilian infrastructure in Gaza’s corridors and buffer zone - resulting in Israel expanding control to 75 per cent of the Gaza Strip by July this year.

The Israeli mission in Geneva dismissed the report’s findings. REUTERS

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