logo
The 11 days that made Albanese and Labor change their path on Palestinian recognition

The 11 days that made Albanese and Labor change their path on Palestinian recognition

Two weeks ago, on a Sunday morning television appearance, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese was unequivocal: there was no move afoot for the Australian government to follow France and promise to recognise a Palestinian state in September.
'Are we about to imminently do that?' he said on the ABC's Insiders. 'No, we are not.'
Even as the United Kingdom and Canada outlined their plans for recognition over subsequent days, Albanese held his line, saying he did not want to make a token gesture. He was not satisfied that the conditions for a functional Palestinian state – free elections, and no role for Hamas – had been met.
Albanese made this argument for the cameras, and also in private, telling confidantes he did not want to move quickly nor appear swayed by external pressure. As elements of Labor's caucus and rank-and-file members tried to increase pressure on the government, Albanese was assuring Jewish groups in parliament that recognition was not imminent.
But 11 days later, Albanese was on a 40-minute phone call, warning an increasingly isolated Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that Australia would soon recognise a Palestinian state.
On Monday, the Albanese government broke with the United States and made the historic announcement that Australia would recognise Palestinian statehood at the United Nations General Assembly meeting in New York next month.
'We can't keep waiting for the end of a peace process that has ground to a halt,' Foreign Minister Penny Wong said.
'We have made clear we would recognise Palestine when it would best contribute momentum to peace. September is that time: when the world says this has gone on far too long; when the world says the heartbreak, death and destruction must end.'
Australia has long given bipartisan support to a two-state solution in the Middle East. The Labor Party's platform specifically supports the recognition of Palestine. Still, there were conditions the government wanted met before taking such a leap. And not much had changed, on paper, during the two weeks Australia resisted recognition.
Questions that Albanese raised on Insiders – 'How do you exclude Hamas from any involvement there? How do you ensure that a Palestinian state operates in an appropriate way which does not threaten the existence of Israel?' – are scarcely closer to being answered today than they were on July 27. Critics of Albanese's decision, including Jewish Australian groups and Israel, made that point on Monday afternoon.
'Only days ago, Prime Minister Albanese set clear conditions for recognising a Palestinian state, renouncing violence, freeing hostages, and establishing credible, accountable governance,' Israel's ambassador to Australia, Amir Maimon, said in a statement.
'He [Albanese] emphasised that these steps were necessary before recognition could occur. Today, however, the Australian government has abandoned those conditions.'
But once the United Kingdom and Canada had made their moves, there was an inevitability to Australia's next steps. 'We didn't want to be leading the pack, but we didn't want to be too slow, either,' said a senior government source. 'We were probably moving in this direction, but the momentum globally meant there was a wave we could ride,' said another.
Images of hunger in Gaza create global mood for change
Wong started laying the groundwork for this week's announcement in April last year. Conventional thinking suggested Palestinian statehood should come only at the end of a peace process with Israel. But as Israeli settlements expanded in the West Bank, Wong argued that recognising Palestine could be a step towards a two-state solution.
Loading
Then, last month, demands for stronger government action built as global attention focused on striking images of starvation coming out of Gaza. Photographs of children spurred public outrage and sentiment that the war needed a circuit-breaker.
Anger was also building in Labor's base. By the end of July, almost 80 local branches had passed motions demanding that Australia impose sanctions on Israel.
Then French President Emmanuel Macron made his move. As ceasefire talks between Israel and Hamas broke down, he tried to generate momentum for a two-state solution. On July 25, Macron announced France would become the first G7 nation – a grouping which includes the United States, UK, Germany, Italy, Japan and Canada – to recognise Palestinian statehood. He would do so at a UN meeting in September.
Without pause, prominent Labor supporters of Palestine called on Albanese to follow suit. Former foreign minister Bob Carr called for Albanese to 'follow France and recognise Palestine in line with Labor policy and the near unanimous opinion of ALP rank-and-file and voter base.'
Albanese, on Insiders, lamented the images coming out of Gaza. A photograph of an emaciated one-year-old boy 'just breaks your heart', he said. But he hosed down expectations that Australia was about to follow France.
'We won't do any decision as a gesture. We will do it as a way forward if the circumstances are met,' Albanese said on July 27.
Senior Labor sources who spoke to this masthead that weekend said Albanese had not ruled out recognising Palestine by the end of the year. However, he wanted to move alongside other like-minded nations, including Britain, Canada and New Zealand.
Albanese resists calls as momentum builds
Those nations moved faster than expected. On July 30, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, under intense pressure from his MPs, declared it was 'the moment to act' as he outlined plans for recognition. It prompted Labor backbencher Ed Husic, the party's most vocal MP on Palestine, to make another plea. 'Moral momentum cannot be ignored … and it requires of us a reconsideration of our approach,' Husic said. But Albanese, meeting with the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, assured them no move on recognition was imminent.
Still, Australia took another step. It signed a letter with 14 other countries saying it was considering Palestinian statehood as a step towards a two-state solution. That same day, a United Nations working group that included the Arab League released a plan to end the war that did not involve Hamas. Australian officials took note. It was the first time Arab nations had demanded Hamas end its rule in Gaza and surrender its weapons to the Palestinian Authority that governs parts of the West Bank.
Albanese spoke with Starmer on the phone that night. Then, the following morning, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney became the next player to move.
Behind closed doors, the Albanese government was butting heads with Israel's representatives. Speaking to his caucus, Albanese slammed remarks from Israel's deputy ambassador, who had told Australian journalists in a briefing that claims of starvation amounted to Hamas propaganda and relied on 'false pictures'. (The New York Times later confirmed that the one-year-old that Albanese referred to had pre-existing medical conditions, but the World Health Organisation has said malnutrition is at 'alarming' levels in Gaza).
On Thursday, Wong held talks with Maimon in her Canberra office and rebuked Israel's behaviour. It was the second time in three days that Israel's ambassador had been spoken to by the government after a lower-level meeting with departmental officials on Tuesday.
Labor MP Jerome Laxale said frustration at the Netanyahu government had contributed to the government's decision-making.
'Australia has been part of a global push to ensure that Israel complies with its international law obligations … and I think there has been a frustration, culminating in our announcement today,' he told Sky News on Monday. Laxale, a member of Labor's left faction, also emphasised the scale of voters' concern. 'This has been issue No.1, two and three in my inbox from constituents,' he said.
That public sentiment was brought into focus on August 3, when thousands of Australians delivered their own message to the Albanese government. More than 100,000 people marched over the Sydney Harbour Bridge and protested in Melbourne.
Loading
But while the protests were a sign of building public sentiment, they also affected the political calculation as the Albanese government mulled its timing. Government sources said they did not want to look like they were responding to a single demonstration.
The protests also brought into focus another dynamic – discipline within Albanese's caucus. While 12 of NSW Premier Chris Minns' MPs marched, only three federal Labor MPs attended: Husic, Cunningham MP Alison Byrnes and Senator Tony Sheldon.
According to sources in the federal caucus, a growing number of MPs had been making representations on Palestinian statehood to the prime minister and foreign minister's office in recent months. But at no point did the feeling in caucus reach boiling point. Most MPs trusted the leadership of the government to move in the right direction over time, although some became frustrated at what they deemed was an over-reliance on written statements which used incrementally stronger wording.
In the days after last weekend's protest, Wong and Albanese continued to lay the groundwork for a shift in Australia's position. As Israeli media outlets had reported that Netanyahu planned to order the full military occupation of Gaza in a last-ditch effort to force Hamas to surrender, Wong's language became increasingly urgent. 'We cannot stand by with what is happening in Gaza and not add momentum towards two states,' she told the ABC's 7.30 on Monday night. 'There is a risk there will be no Palestine left to recognise if the international community [doesn't] move to create that pathway to a two-state solution,' she told ABC radio on Tuesday.
Sources familiar with Australia's conversations with international counterparts said Wong and Albanese were collaborating on 'advanced' thinking on reconstruction of Gaza, including a potential role for Australia in helping foster a functioning state with bureaucrats and health services.
Loading
The Friday before the Harbour Bridge protest, Albanese discussed Palestine with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres. The Tuesday afterwards, on August 5, he had a phone call with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. On the call, Albanese sought assurances Abbas would pursue peace, and they committed to meet in New York. On Thursday, August 7, Albanese outlined his thinking to Netanyahu.
'The arguments that he put to me were very similar to the arguments that he put more than a year ago,' Albanese said, in his description of the call. 'I put the argument to him that we need a political solution, not a military one, because a military response alone has seen the devastation in Gaza.'
So much about that political solution remains uncertain. But Wong did not entertain the prospect of the peace process falling apart.
'Our expectation is the international community will work with all parties to ensure not only that those commitments are adhered to, but there is progress towards two states,' she said. 'There is no sustained peace unless we see a two-state solution. I think we all know that.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What does recognising a Palestinian state mean?
What does recognising a Palestinian state mean?

West Australian

time15 minutes ago

  • West Australian

What does recognising a Palestinian state mean?

Anthony Albanese is now among a growing list of Western leaders vowing to recognise a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly in September. The Prime Minister heralded the decision as a step toward breaking 'the cycle of violence in the Middle East' and bringing 'an end to the conflict, suffering and starvation in Gaza'. Though, not everyone agrees. Since making his Palestine declaration on Monday, Mr Albanese has been both accused of 'rewarding' Hamas and praised for joining global push to realise the rights of Palestinians. His more mild critics have argued it will do nothing to end the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza. For better or worse, it is historic. So, why now and how will it all work? Why now? The 'momentum towards two states', as Foreign Minister Penny Wong described it, comes amid outrage over severe civilian suffering in Gaza, where Israeli forces have spent nearly two years relentlessly pursuing Islamist militants behind the October 7 attacks in 2023. Hamas, the group responsible, runs Gaza and its operations riddle the densely populated Palestinian territory, with tunnels and armouries nestled in civilian zones. More than 60,000 have been killed in the 22 month-long conflict, according to Gazan health officials. How many of those are Hamas fighters is unclear and because foreign reporters cannot enter Gaza, figures are hard for media to independently verify. But the death toll stacks up with assessments from independent monitors and local journalists working for trusted international agencies. So too do reports that nearly 200 have starved to death due to Israel's chokehold on aid. With the Israeli government rejecting that people were starving, French President Emmanuel Macron said in late July that it was time to break the status quo and make meaningful steps toward a two-state solution – Israelis and Palestinians living within sovereign, internationally recognised borders. The UK and Canada quickly followed suit, paving the way for Australia. Though, Donald Rothwell, a leading international law expert, said 'it's clear the Albanese government had been laying the groundwork' since 2024. 'There was obviously a significant intensity about how the government sought to build and prosecute its case over the course of the last 16 days or so,' he told NewsWire. Mr Rothwell pointed to three key developments that he said likely 'accelerated' Mr Albanese's decision. The first was Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announcing plans to occupy all of Gaza. Australia joined several Western countries in condemning the plans in a statement, saying that actioning them would 'aggravate the catastrophic humanitarian situation, endanger the lives of the hostages, and further risk the mass displacement of civilians'. The second development was Israeli settlers stepping up efforts to annex land in West Bank – the second Palestinian enclave and only territory controlled by the Palestinian Authority. The final development was a vote in Israel's parliament that showing overwhelming opposition to Palestinian statehood. Mr Netanyahu mentioned the vote in a press conference on Sunday. He told reporters the 'Jewish public is … against the Palestinian state for the simple reason that they know it won't bring peace'. 'It'll bring war,' he said. Mr Rothman said 'all those factors combined' drove the urgency. How will it work? Mr Albanese named four key commitments he secured from Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority (PA). The first two include Hamas having 'no role' in a future Palestinian state and the PA recognising 'Israel's right to exist in peace and security'. While Mr Albanese said Mr Abbas 'reaffirmed' his support for the second point, the PA has no presence in Gaza and no control over Hamas. As Mr Rothwell said, 'It's not clear to me at all as to how the Palestinian Authority can achieve that, given that it has no control or authority over Hamas in Gaza.' The PA itself is commonly criticised for its corruption, ineffectiveness and lack of elections. The last presidential vote was in 2005. It also has a radicalisation problem in West Bank and pays families of 'martyrs' – Palestinians wounded or killed in flare ups with Israel. The 'Martyrs Fund' has been heavily criticised as supporting terrorism. Mr Albanese said Mr Abbas also committed to demilitarising and holding elections, and scrapping the payments to martyrs' families as part of broader transparency reforms. On election, Mr Rothwell said he could not see how the PA could hold 'fair and free elections' before the UNGA next month. Instead, he said the Albanese government and others promising to recognise Palestine are 'really trying to hold Mahmoud Abbas and the Palestinian Authority to … free and true elections sometime towards the end of 2025 or early 2026'. In terms of how Australia recognises Palestine, Mr Rothwell said the Albanese government has taken an 'exceptional' pathway. A government can recognise a state at any time – it does not need to be at the UN General Assembly (UNGA). He said that in 'most instances' recognition is made official via a statement, so Mr Albanese announcing it to reporters from the prime ministerial courtyard on Monday 'was quite exceptional'. 'But then to have a two-step process, effectively saying in Canberra on the 11th of August, we're going to recognise, but then we're formally going to recognise that the UNGA … just falls into the notion of a Palestinian exception,' Mr Rothwell said. When Mr Albanese travels to the UN in New York next month, he will vote, alongside the leaders of France, the UK, Canada and several other countries, to join the 147 nations that already recognise Palestine. 'It's obviously a peak forum at which these matters can be discussed,' Mr Rothwell said. 'And in recent years, that peak forum in September has set aside some time for debate and discussion about Palestinian membership of the United Nations.' But he noted that 'the General Assembly vote is just one part of a two part process for a state becoming a member of the United Nations'. 'In the second part of that process is endorsement of that UN General Assembly vote by the Security Council,' Mr Rothwell said. Last year, a vote passed the General Assembly but was vetoed by the US in the Security Council. This has happened several times and the Trump administration is staunchly against Palestinian statehood while Hamas controls Gaza. But Mr Rothwell pointed out that statehood does not require UN membership. For example, Australia recognises Kosovo even though it is not a UN member. 'It's not exceptional that Australia recognises a state which is not a member of the United Nations,' Mr Rothwell said. 'Secondly, there are some states out there that Australia recognises who are not UN members and then membership may well be delayed or deferred or constantly blocked for a number of political reasons.' He added that 'throughout the history of the United Nations, that's not necessarily been exceptional'.

‘Hostile:' Bishop hit with damning claims
‘Hostile:' Bishop hit with damning claims

Perth Now

time15 minutes ago

  • Perth Now

‘Hostile:' Bishop hit with damning claims

Australian National University Chancellor Julie Bishop has been accused in a Senate hearing of bullying a staff member to the point of 'near suicide' following a private meeting where the former Liberal minister allegedly laughed at her and blocked her from leaving the room. In an emotional statement to a Senate committee on the quality of governance at universities, former ANU council member Liz Allen accused Ms Bishop of threatening behaviour after she was wrongly accused of leaking information about ANU's leadership to the media. Dr Allen alleged the bullying she suffered due to senior leadership, including Vice-Chancellor Genevieve Bell and Ms Bishop, pushed her into contemplating suicide, and senior leadership failed to support her after she suffered a miscarriage. 'ANU leaders behave with impunity, keep counsel in the dark and fail to adequately disclose conflicts,' Dr Allen told the Senate committee. 'Since 2024 I've experienced threats, intimidation and bullying because I sought greater probity of council conduct. 'I was bullied into near suicide. I miscarried a much wanted baby. I've lost the opportunity of a promotion. I fear for my job, and my career has been derailed.' Former Australian Foreign Affairs Minister, Julie Bishop, is now the Chancellor of Australian National University. NewsWire / Martin Ollman Credit: News Corp Australia Under university leadership structures, the council acts as an institution's governing body and is chaired by the chancellor. Dr Allen told the Senate committee during one council meeting in February, Ms Bishop specifically accused herself and another council member of leaking to the media – claims she rejects. 'I take my obligations extremely seriously and would never compromise my integrity,' she said. 'When I defended myself in this meeting, the chancellor suggested I defamed her. The repeated public allegations and increasing aggression was so distressing I cried and began to hyperventilate during the meeting.' She said Ms Bishop 'further berated me' and another elected council member in a private room following the meeting, in which Ms Bishop threatened a legal investigation, and said she would call 'a journalist to confirm I wasn't leaking' and blocked her from exiting the room. 'I became further distressed with the continued pursuit of false leaking allegations,' she said. 'Chancellor Bishop laughed incredulously at my emotional response, and at one point blocked me leaving the room. 'I was so distressed I couldn't breathe and struggled walking.' ANU demographer Dr Liz Allen said she had been bullied into 'near suicide'. NewsWire/ Martin Ollman Credit: News Corp Australia Dr Allen, who was pregnant at the time, told the committee the 'traumatising' meeting affected her 'so deeply' that she 'decided to kill myself' while driving home from the meeting. Two weeks later, she also suffered a miscarriage, after she was told her baby son's 'heart stopped beating'. 'I pulled over to write final goodbyes to my children and my partner. I emailed my supervisors so they knew I hadn't done anything wrong,' she said. 'A call from my husband stopped me taking my life I was pregnant at the time of these incidents.' Dr Allen told the committee 'further bullying and threats' continued after she launched a workplace complaint following the meeting, and alleged the chief people officer 'implied' she had 'mental health problems and dismissed the dysfunction of council'. She was also told by ANU Pro Chancellor Alison Kitchen that her 'position was untenable' and that she had a 'duty to resign all because I had no confidence in the council'. While Ms Bishop and Prof Bell were invited to the inquiry, they were unable to attend. ANU chief operating officer Jonathan Churchill said Ms Bishop was unable to attend the inquiry due to commitments as the UN Secretary General's Special Envoy on Myanmar, while Prof Bell was 'on sick leave' with the flu. Neither Ms Bishop or ANU Vice-Chancellor Genevieve Bell attended the inquiry. NewsWire/ Martin Ollman Credit: News Corp Australia While he didn't make specific reference to the claims, he said 'a number of the statements' made against ANU did 'not appear to be correct'. 'We have listened carefully to the proceedings from earlier today and the allegations made against the university. We take what has been said very seriously,' he said. 'We will examine all of the statements made and respond with particularity in writing to those assertions.' He also withdrew from commenting on allegations put forward by Dr Allen, adding that it could compromise the current grievance procedure launched by Dr Allen. Prior to Mr Churchill's appearance, inquiry chair and Labor senator Leah Blythe said that should ANU's representation not be able to 'answer senators' question' the inquiry would 'reserve our right to recall those witnesses at a later date'. 'Our inquiry goes till December, so I'm sure we will be able to find a time which is suitable for all, if that is required,' she said. In a statement during questioning, Greens' higher education spokeswoman Mehreen Faruqi said she was 'shell shocked and shaken' by Dr Allen's comments, and questioned Prof bell and Ms Bishop's future at the university. 'I feel no other pathway here but for Vice Chancellor Bell and Chancellor bishop to resign or be sacked,' she said. mental health helplines

How will Albo's Palestine pledge work?
How will Albo's Palestine pledge work?

Perth Now

time15 minutes ago

  • Perth Now

How will Albo's Palestine pledge work?

Anthony Albanese is now among a growing list of Western leaders vowing to recognise a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly in September. The Prime Minister heralded the decision as a step toward breaking 'the cycle of violence in the Middle East' and bringing 'an end to the conflict, suffering and starvation in Gaza'. Though, not everyone agrees. Since making his Palestine declaration on Monday, Mr Albanese has been both accused of 'rewarding' Hamas and praised for joining global push to realise the rights of Palestinians. His more mild critics have argued it will do nothing to end the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza. For better or worse, it is historic. So, why now and how will it all work? Why now? The 'momentum towards two states', as Foreign Minister Penny Wong described it, comes amid outrage over severe civilian suffering in Gaza, where Israeli forces have spent nearly two years relentlessly pursuing Islamist militants behind the October 7 attacks in 2023. Hamas, the group responsible, runs Gaza and its operations riddle the densely populated Palestinian territory, with tunnels and armouries nestled in civilian zones. More than 60,000 have been killed in the 22 month-long conflict, according to Gazan health officials. How many of those are Hamas fighters is unclear and because foreign reporters cannot enter Gaza, figures are hard for media to independently verify. But the death toll stacks up with assessments from independent monitors and local journalists working for trusted international agencies. So too do reports that nearly 200 have starved to death due to Israel's chokehold on aid. With the Israeli government rejecting that people were starving, French President Emmanuel Macron said in late July that it was time to break the status quo and make meaningful steps toward a two-state solution – Israelis and Palestinians living within sovereign, internationally recognised borders. The UK and Canada quickly followed suit, paving the way for Australia. Though, Donald Rothwell, a leading international law expert, said 'it's clear the Albanese government had been laying the groundwork' since 2024. 'There was obviously a significant intensity about how the government sought to build and prosecute its case over the course of the last 16 days or so,' he told NewsWire. Mr Rothwell pointed to three key developments that he said likely 'accelerated' Mr Albanese's decision. The first was Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announcing plans to occupy all of Gaza. Australia joined several Western countries in condemning the plans in a statement, saying that actioning them would 'aggravate the catastrophic humanitarian situation, endanger the lives of the hostages, and further risk the mass displacement of civilians'. The second development was Israeli settlers stepping up efforts to annex land in West Bank – the second Palestinian enclave and only territory controlled by the Palestinian Authority. The final development was a vote in Israel's parliament that showing overwhelming opposition to Palestinian statehood. Mr Netanyahu mentioned the vote in a press conference on Sunday. He told reporters the 'Jewish public is … against the Palestinian state for the simple reason that they know it won't bring peace'. 'It'll bring war,' he said. Mr Rothman said 'all those factors combined' drove the urgency. How will it work? Mr Albanese named four key commitments he secured from Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority (PA). The first two include Hamas having 'no role' in a future Palestinian state and the PA recognising 'Israel's right to exist in peace and security'. While Mr Albanese said Mr Abbas 'reaffirmed' his support for the second point, the PA has no presence in Gaza and no control over Hamas. As Mr Rothwell said, 'It's not clear to me at all as to how the Palestinian Authority can achieve that, given that it has no control or authority over Hamas in Gaza.' The PA itself is commonly criticised for its corruption, ineffectiveness and lack of elections. The last presidential vote was in 2005. It also has a radicalisation problem in West Bank and pays families of 'martyrs' – Palestinians wounded or killed in flare ups with Israel. The 'Martyrs Fund' has been heavily criticised as supporting terrorism. Mr Albanese said Mr Abbas also committed to demilitarising and holding elections, and scrapping the payments to martyrs' families as part of broader transparency reforms. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says Australia will recognise Palestine at the UN General Assembly in September. Martin Ollman / NewsWire Credit: News Corp Australia On election, Mr Rothwell said he could not see how the PA could hold 'fair and free elections' before the UNGA next month. Instead, he said the Albanese government and others promising to recognise Palestine are 'really trying to hold Mahmoud Abbas and the Palestinian Authority to … free and true elections sometime towards the end of 2025 or early 2026'. In terms of how Australia recognises Palestine, Mr Rothwell said the Albanese government has taken an 'exceptional' pathway. A government can recognise a state at any time – it does not need to be at the UN General Assembly (UNGA). He said that in 'most instances' recognition is made official via a statement, so Mr Albanese announcing it to reporters from the prime ministerial courtyard on Monday 'was quite exceptional'. 'But then to have a two-step process, effectively saying in Canberra on the 11th of August, we're going to recognise, but then we're formally going to recognise that the UNGA … just falls into the notion of a Palestinian exception,' Mr Rothwell said. When Mr Albanese travels to the UN in New York next month, he will vote, alongside the leaders of France, the UK, Canada and several other countries, to join the 147 nations that already recognise Palestine. 'It's obviously a peak forum at which these matters can be discussed,' Mr Rothwell said. 'And in recent years, that peak forum in September has set aside some time for debate and discussion about Palestinian membership of the United Nations.' But he noted that 'the General Assembly vote is just one part of a two part process for a state becoming a member of the United Nations'. 'In the second part of that process is endorsement of that UN General Assembly vote by the Security Council,' Mr Rothwell said. Last year, a vote passed the General Assembly but was vetoed by the US in the Security Council. This has happened several times and the Trump administration is staunchly against Palestinian statehood while Hamas controls Gaza. But Mr Rothwell pointed out that statehood does not require UN membership. For example, Australia recognises Kosovo even though it is not a UN member. 'It's not exceptional that Australia recognises a state which is not a member of the United Nations,' Mr Rothwell said. 'Secondly, there are some states out there that Australia recognises who are not UN members and then membership may well be delayed or deferred or constantly blocked for a number of political reasons.' He added that 'throughout the history of the United Nations, that's not necessarily been exceptional'.

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