UK set to recognise Palestinian state, Deputy PM Lammy says aim is to help two-state solution

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FILE PHOTO: Britain's Foreign Secretary David Lammy speaks during a stakeout after addressing during a High-level International Conference for the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine and the Implementation of the Two-State Solution at U.N headquarters in New York City, U.S., July 29, 2025.  REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz/File photo

Britain's Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy said any recognition should be seen as part of a peace process leading to an eventual two-state solution.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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- Prime Minister Keir Starmer is expected to announce on Sept 21 Britain's recognition of a Palestinian state in a break with longstanding policy despite stiff opposition from Israel and

disapproval from the United States

, Britain’s closest ally.

Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy confirmed that Mr Starmer would announce his decision later on Sept 21 and said any recognition should be seen as part of a peace process leading to an eventual two-state solution.

A number of other countries including France, Canada, Australia and Belgium are also expected to formally recognise a Palestinian state this week at the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

“Any step to recognise (a Palestinian state) is because we wish to keep alive the prospects of a two-state solution,” Mr Lammy told Sky News.

No Gaza ceasefire, says Mr Lammy

Mr Starmer said in July that Britain would recognise Palestine unless Israel reached a ceasefire with Hamas, let more aid into Gaza, made clear there would be no annexation of the West Bank, and committed to a peace process delivering a two-state solution – a Palestinian state coexisting alongside Israel.

“Since that announcement in July, in fact, with the attack on Qatar, a ceasefire at this point lays in tatters, and the prospects are bleak,” Mr Lammy said, adding that Israel had also moved forward with a settlement plan.

Mr Lammy later told the BBC: “Do we say we have to wait for the perfect conditions before we can recognise a Palestinian state… Do we say to them: ‘No you cannot have that Palestinian state that is your dream?’”

When asked whether recognising a Palestinian state would be “good news” for Hamas, Mr Lammy said it was important to draw a distinction between the militant Islamist group that has been running Gaza and the Palestinian people.

US President Donald Trump said on Sept 18 during a state visit to Britain that he disagreed with Mr Starmer’s plan to recognise a Palestinian state.

Mr Starmer said he and Mr Trump had agreed on the “need for peace and a road map” in the region.

Britain will join more than 140 other members of the UN which have recognised a Palestinian state.

But its decision carries symbolic weight as Britain has long been a key ally of Israel and played a key role in its creation as a modern nation in the aftermath of World War II. REUTERS

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