The leaders of Spain, Ireland, Slovenia and Malta have
announced they stand ready to recognize the State of Palestine as the only way
to achieve peace and security in the war-ridden region.
The four leaders gathered on the margins of a summit in
Brussels on Friday to discuss their readiness to recognize Palestine, adding
they stand ready to do so when it can make a positive contribution and the
circumstances are right.
“We are agreed that the only way to achieve lasting peace
and stability in the region is through implementation of a two-state solution,
with Israeli and Palestinian States living side-by-side, in peace and
security,” a joint statement by the four heads of government reads.
Speaking after the summit, Slovenian Prime Minister Robert
Golob said he believed a lot could be done in the next week to strengthen
political backing for a Palestinian state in the United Nations. Golob added he
was sure that the moment when conditions for establishing a new government in
Palestine will be ripe could be a few weeks, maybe a month away.
Nine of
the EU’s 27 member states currently recognize Palestinians’ right to a state
according to the so-called 1967 borders, which includes the West Bank, the Gaza
Strip and East Jerusalem.
Malta, along with eastern states such as Bulgaria, the Czech
Republic, Romania and Slovakia, have recognized the Palestinians’ right to
statehood since 1988. In 2014, Sweden became the first member state to
unilaterally recognise Palestinians’ right to statehood while a member of the
bloc.
The Slovenian premier confirmed a representative also
attended the meeting on behalf of the Belgian government, seen as another
staunch supporter of Palestinians’ fight for statehood.
Belgium currently holds the 6-month rotating Presidency of
the Council of the EU, responsible for overseeing its work and therefore likely
restricted from signing such declarations.
Although the European Union supports the two-state solution
– which would deliver statehood for Palestinians – and is the single biggest
donor of aid to Palestinians, it has not yet unanimously backed the recognition
of a Palestinian state.
“The debate on the recognition of Palestine was not on the
table,” European Council President Charles Michel explained on Friday.
“But I will share with you what I think about it. I think
that if the idea is to start a kind of process so it’s possible to take into
account steps that could be made on both sides – by the Palestinian Authority,
for instance, and by Israel – then it could be a useful process.”
Since the outbreak of the war in Gaza, both Ireland and
Spain have repeatedly expressed readiness to recognize Palestine, and spearheaded
efforts to toughen the EU’s stance on Israel in response to the excessive
loss of life in Gaza.
In a
breakthrough on Thursday, the EU’s 27 leaders unanimously called for a
ceasefire in Gaza for the first time since the outbreak of the war between
Israel and Hamas.
Last November, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez vowed
that his newly formed government would make the recognition of Palestinian
statehood its main priority in terms of foreign policy.
Speaking after the Brussels summit on Friday, Sánchez
suggested to reporters that Spain preferred to move in lockstep with other EU
countries rather than recognizing a Palestinian state unilaterally, an idea it
has flirted with in the past.
“We
want to take this step united. It’s a decisive step in order to lay the
foundations of a lasting peace,” he said, adding that the EU should carefully
calibrate the right moment to take the step.
Sánchez also suggested that the fact the four leaders
represented all sides of the political spectrum – with Spain and Malta governed
by centre-left parties, Slovenia by a Liberal party, and Ireland by a
centre-right party – showed there was broad political consensus that the
recognition of Palestine is necessary for any future peace process.
In February, Irish Taoiseach Leo Varadkar also confirmed a
group of member states were in talks to formally recognize Palestine to enable a
more equal negotiation to happen when the war raging in Gaza comes to an end.