logo
Canada's Mark Carney derided online for vision of ‘Zionist Palestinian state'

Canada's Mark Carney derided online for vision of ‘Zionist Palestinian state'

Middle East Eye6 hours ago

On Wednesday, during the 2025 Nato summit, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney appeared in an interview with Christiane Amanpour on CNN, where he made confusing remarks about the need for 'a Zionist Palestinian state', triggering backlash online.
Amanpour asked Carney about his vision for peace in the Middle East, specifically concerning the issue of a Palestinian state, where its indigenous people can live in harmony and peace.
In response, Carney said that 'in working on a path to a Palestinian state, living side by side in security with Israel… a Zionist Palestinian state if you will, that recognises the right of Israel to exist, not just to exist, but to prosper. We can't have peace unless we move towards that.'
Many social media users, as well as non-governmental organisations (NGO) in Canada, criticised these remarks by Carney, who implied that the prime minister essentially 'wants Palestinians to adopt the political ideology of their oppressors'.
Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East, a grassroots NGO in Canada that defines its mission as being 'to enable Canadians of all backgrounds to promote justice, development and peace in the Middle East', called Carney 'dead wrong'.
New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch
Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters
Today, Prime Minister @MarkJCarney suggested he would not recognize a Palestinian state unless it was 'Zionist.'
In doing so, Carney is asking Palestinians to adopt the political ideology of their oppressors as a pre-condition for self-determination.
He is dead wrong. Zionism… pic.twitter.com/orlUsa0FnW — Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East (@CJPME) June 25, 2025
Another Canada-based NGO, the National Council of Canadian Muslims (NCCM), also shot back, saying that Carney's remarks are in direct contrast to Canada's foreign policy, 'which affirms the right to the creation of a sovereign, independent, viable, democratic, and territorially contiguous Palestinian state'.
In a long thread on the social media platform X, NCCM said that Carney's remarks are 'insulting' and continue a trend of ignoring Israel's continuing war on Gaza, which several countries, as well as many international rights groups and experts, now qualify as an act of genocide.
7/8. But the comments today are insulting and devoid of the context of an Israeli government that has not only refused to recognize Palestine, but has continued to illegally occupy more and more Palestinian land as it carries out a genocide against Palestinians. — NCCM (@nccm) June 24, 2025
The fact that Carney mentioned a two-state solution for Israel and Palestine in the interview, but added that this Palestinian state should be a 'Zionist' one, was interpreted by many on social media as 'evil' and 'bigoted'.
It was not on my bingo card that Prime Minister @MarkJCarney would call for something so hateful, bigoted, and cruel as calling for a "Zionist Palestine." I never imagined he was capable of such evil--evil is the right word--thinking.
Does Carney not realize that it is Zionists… — Stephen Best (@BestStephenD) June 25, 2025
Many also argued that Carney demonstrated his commitment to Zionism, 'just like many other Canadian PMs before him'.
Social media users did not differentiate between Carney's remarks about a 'Zionist Palestinian state' and his continuous support for Israel's ongoing war on Gaza, which has killed over 56,000 people.
Mark Carney is a Zionist fanatic. There is no other explanation for his militarism and imperialism and his support for genocide in Gaza. The notion of a 'Zionist Palestine' is simply unhinged. I am actually shocked to hear it out of his mouth https://t.co/l5v2Wi2jXN — David Robbins (@iroguerobot) June 25, 2025
In May, shortly after Carney was elected Canada's new prime minister, Canada co-signed a joint statement with unusually strong language targeting Israel with its G7 allies, the UK and France, calling Gaza's suffering "intolerable" and Israel's minimal aid allotment "wholly inadequate".
Around the same time, the three countries threatened Israel with sanctions if it failed to stop its military operations in Gaza and immediately allow humanitarian aid to enter.
These recent moves could explain why so many on social media were shocked and outraged by the prime minister's remarks, which, according to them, stemmed from "ignorance".
In May, four Canadians were part of a delegation with their European counterparts on a visit to the occupied West Bank when Israeli soldiers opened fire on them.
In response, Canada demanded a full investigation and an immediate explanation, calling it 'totally unacceptable'. Israel said it 'regrets the inconvenience'.
However, Canada did not take action towards Israel in terms of sanctions or cutting trade ties with the country, even though there were many organisations as well as Canadian political parties calling on the country to do so.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israeli attacks kill at least 21 people in Gaza, medics say
Israeli attacks kill at least 21 people in Gaza, medics say

Dubai Eye

timean hour ago

  • Dubai Eye

Israeli attacks kill at least 21 people in Gaza, medics say

Israeli gunfire and airstrikes killed at least 21 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip on Thursday, local health authorities said, as mediators reached out to Israel and Hamas to seek a resumption of ceasefire talks to end the war. Local health authorities said an Israeli airstrike killed at least nine people at a school housing displaced families in the Sheikh Radwan suburb in Gaza City, while another strike killed nine people near a tent encampment in Khan Younis in the south of the enclave. Three other people were killed by Israeli gunfire and dozens were wounded as crowds awaited UN aid trucks along a main route in central Gaza, medics said, the latest in a series of multiple fatalities at aid distribution points. There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military on Thursday's incidents. Israel says it is seeking to eliminate Hamas, which attacked southern Israel from Gaza in 2023, and free hostages still held by the group. The new deaths come as Arab mediators, Egypt and Qatar, backed by the US, reached out to the warring parties in a bid to hold new ceasefire talks, but no exact time was set for a new round, according to Hamas sources. Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who leads a coalition with far-right parties, insists that Hamas, which has ruled Gaza for nearly two decades, release all hostages, relinquish any role and lay down its weapons to end to the war. Hamas, in turn, has stated it would release the hostages if Israel agrees to a permanent ceasefire and withdraws from Gaza. While it has conceded it would no longer govern Gaza, Hamas has refused to discuss disarmament. Hamas-led fighters killed close to 1,200 people and took 251 hostages when they attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, according to tallies from Israel, which launched a huge military campaign in response. Israel's retaliatory war has so far killed more than 56,000 Palestinians, according to local health authorities, and destroyed much of the coastal strip. Most of the hostages released so far have been freed through indirect negotiations between Hamas and Israel.

Israeli attacks kill at least 21 people in Gaza, medics say
Israeli attacks kill at least 21 people in Gaza, medics say

ARN News Center

time2 hours ago

  • ARN News Center

Israeli attacks kill at least 21 people in Gaza, medics say

Israeli gunfire and airstrikes killed at least 21 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip on Thursday, local health authorities said, as mediators reached out to Israel and Hamas to seek a resumption of ceasefire talks to end the war. Local health authorities said an Israeli airstrike killed at least nine people at a school housing displaced families in the Sheikh Radwan suburb in Gaza City, while another strike killed nine people near a tent encampment in Khan Younis in the south of the enclave. Three other people were killed by Israeli gunfire and dozens were wounded as crowds awaited UN aid trucks along a main route in central Gaza, medics said, the latest in a series of multiple fatalities at aid distribution points. There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military on Thursday's incidents. Israel says it is seeking to eliminate Hamas, which attacked southern Israel from Gaza in 2023, and free hostages still held by the group. The new deaths come as Arab mediators, Egypt and Qatar, backed by the US, reached out to the warring parties in a bid to hold new ceasefire talks, but no exact time was set for a new round, according to Hamas sources. Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who leads a coalition with far-right parties, insists that Hamas, which has ruled Gaza for nearly two decades, release all hostages, relinquish any role and lay down its weapons to end to the war. Hamas, in turn, has stated it would release the hostages if Israel agrees to a permanent ceasefire and withdraws from Gaza. While it has conceded it would no longer govern Gaza, Hamas has refused to discuss disarmament. Hamas-led fighters killed close to 1,200 people and took 251 hostages when they attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, according to tallies from Israel, which launched a huge military campaign in response. Israel's retaliatory war has so far killed more than 56,000 Palestinians, according to local health authorities, and destroyed much of the coastal strip.

Popular condemnation
Popular condemnation

Gulf Today

time5 hours ago

  • Gulf Today

Popular condemnation

Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil was freed from detention at a US immigration facility last Friday after 104 days of captivity. A graduate student at Columbia University, Khalil – who is Palestinian by parentage – has an Algerian passport and permanent US residence. He was snatched without a warrant from his home in early March as he and his pregnant wife were returning from an evening out. His case attracted widespread popular condemnation. Rights groups accused the Trump administration of violation the sacrosanct First Amendment of the US Constitution which guarantees freedom of speech and assembly. Amnesty International condemned his arrest and pressed for his freedom. Amnesty's regional director Ana Piquer stated, 'We remain deeply concerned by the escalating use of detention, intimidation, deportation, and disregard to right of due process, to silence protest and chill public debate in the United States. This is not just about one student, it is about the growing pattern of authoritarian practices by the Trump administration that undermine human rights. We urge the US government to end the political targeting of students and other individuals based on their beliefs and to respect freedom of speech. Mahmoud's detention [was] a stark reminder of the human rights that are at stake in the country, and we will continue to monitor his case.' On his release, he rejoined his wife Noor Abdallah and hugged his newborn son for the first time. However, he is not a totally free man as his immigration case is ongoing and the authorities seized his passport and green card which identifies him as a legal US resident. His movements are restricted to New York and nearby states. A federal judge in Newark, New Jersey, ordered Khalil's release on bail, asserting, unconditionally: 'He is not a danger to the community. Period, full stop.' The judge accepted his lawyers' contention that his prosecution was politically motivated. Khalil had committed no crime. Officials had charged him with threatening national security by protesting US backing for Israel's Gaza war and accused him of antisemitism although Jewish students demonstrated alongside him at Columbia University and elsewhere. His high-profile arrest was the most energetically contested of multiple immigration cases levelled against foreign students who took part in these anti-war protests at US universities. Other detainees were either freed or deported from the country. His release could encourage others to fight. Khalil's release constitutes a blow to the Trump administration's campaign to dictate the US narrative and take questionable or downright illegal actions to stifle dissidence. In addition to branding protests against Israel as antisemitic and against US policies favouring Israel, Trump has nearly closed the Voice of America (VOA) by firing thousands of journalists on its staff. The administration claimed the VOA was 'riddled with dysfunction, bias, and waste. The VOA was established during World War II to counter Nazi propaganda and played the same role during the Cold War between the West and the Soviet Union. Trump has followed up by cutting funding to National Public Radio and the Public Broadcasting System which serves mainly rural communities. Critics argue the administration is taking this action to limit the public's access to independent reports and liberal, progressive views which challenge Trump's line and actions. Trump has led the charge against federal, educational, and institutional policies based on identity. These are meant to give opportunities to people of all backgrounds. These policies, dubbed 'diversity, equity and diversity,' remove gender, ethnic, religious, and educational requirements for inclusion in a wide range of activities and ensure equal treatment and pay. Trump has also issued a travel ban on visitors from 12 countries, including Afghanistan, Iran, Libya, Yemen, and Sudan, and a partial travel ban on seven more. This ban affects predominantly black and brown people as well as those from Muslim-majority countries. Amnesty accused the administration of racial discrimination, creates hatred, and promotes the idea that citizens from the targeted countries are likely to mount attacks in the US. Amnesty said, 'This arbitrary travel ban also violates the right to seek and enjoy asylum from persecution and the US obligation to protect [asylum seekers and refugees] under international and national refugee law.' US Senator Alex Padilla was arrested, thrown to the floor, and handcuffed by law officers for asking a question of Homeland Security chief Kristi Noem at a press conference. A judge was arrested in her office for helping a defendant to evade arrest by an immigration team. Masked squads snatch, arrest, and disappear targeted individuals in public and detain those protesting peacefully against his mass roundups of migrants. Trump placed the California National Guard under federal control and deployed 700 marines against largely peaceful Los Angeles demonstrations against his administration's crack down on migrants. This intervention coincided with the June 14th military parade in Washington to mark the 250th anniversary of the US army, Trump's 79th birthday, and anti-authoritarian 'No King' protests against Trump's authoritarianism which drew five million across the US. Trump again demonstrated his authoritarian bent on the international plane by ordering and carrying out attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities in support of Israel's war on Iran. While anti-Iran hawks and most lawmakers in Trump's Republican party praised this action, Democrats were highly critical. They argued that he failed to seek congressional authorisation to use military force abroad and insisted on a full, classified briefing on this operation. Some Democrats called for Trump's impeachment. Photo: AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store