
Canada 'intends' to recognise Palestinian state at UN General Assembly
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said his country's endorsement of a Palestinian State was conditional on several factors, including that Hamas could play no role in it, it be demilitarised and the Palestinian Authority must hold elections by 2026.
"Canada intends to recognise the State of Palestine at the 80th Session of the United Nations General Assembly in September 2025," Me Carney said, citing "intolerable" suffering in Gaza.
The decision comes amid a groundswell of support for a Palestinian state among Israel's allies. The humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza, where more than 60,100 Palestinians have been killed and mass starvation grips the enclave, has forced countries to change their approach to the conflict.
Mr Carney said Canada had long supported a two-state solution and that the deteriorating situation both in Gaza and the occupied West Bank made time of the essence.
'Canada's had a long-standing, principled stand ... a belief in a two-state solution, the inalienable rights of both peoples, and the fact that peace and security could only be achieved through it,' Mr Carney said. 'That prospect, that possibility of a two-state solution, is being eroded before our eyes.'
Mr Carney said he had spoken with his counterparts in the UK and France, which also are expected to recognise Palestine at the UN General Assembly, and that there was power in numbers.
"It does matter that others are moving [on the issue]," Mr Carney said.
"We are working ourselves with others, to preserve the possibility of a two-state solution, to not allow the facts on the ground, deaths on the ground, the settlements on the ground the expropriations on the ground to get to such an extent that this is not possible," he added.
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