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Canberra Times
18 minutes ago
- Canberra Times
'Best opportunity' for peace: PM defends Palestine call
"We know this is a hard road to walk, but the alternative is to accept where we are, and I think the international community is saying to both the Israeli and Palestinian peoples we have to find a different path," she told ABC radio.


7NEWS
18 minutes ago
- 7NEWS
PM Anthony Albanese questioned about ‘rewarding Hamas' as he announces Australia will support Palestinian statehood
Sunrise host Nat Barr has confronted Prime Minister Anthony Albanese over his support of Palestinian statehood, questioning if Australia is rewarding the actions of terrorist group Hamas. On Monday, Albanese revealed the government will join France, the UK, and Canada in recognising Palestine at a United Nations General Assembly meeting in September. More than 140 of 193 UN member states already recognise Palestine, including European Union member states Spain and Ireland. Barr questioned the prime minster on Sunrise on Tuesday. 'What about the argument that Hamas went in, they murdered those people on October 7 and two years later they have got partly got what they want, they have got their own state?' Barr asked. Barr was referring to the October 7 attacks, in which Hamas soldiers breached Israeli defences, killing more than 1200 people. They also abducted 251 people, with 50 hostages still kept in captivity. Albanese replied: 'Hamas do not want this. Hamas don't want two states. Hamas wants to destroy Israel, which is why Hamas can have no role whatsoever in a future Palestinian state. 'This is about isolating Hamas, and the clear statements by the Arab neighbours that was made just a couple of weeks ago in the meeting convened by France and Saudi Arabia was a breakthrough. 'We need Israel to be recognised by all the states surrounding (it).' Albanese said his position is backed by the 1947 statement by the United Nations, which envisaged two states — a majority Jewish state of Israel providing a homeland for the Jewish people existing side-by-side with a Palestinian state in peace and security. Albanese explained this was a sign the international community has had enough. He added Australians have also had enough of the conflict, with a peaceful resolution necessary. 'This is a conflict that has gone on now for 77 years,' Albanese said. 'The international community is saying we need to find a solution that promotes security for the state of Israel but also recognises the political aspirations of the Palestinian people for their own state. 'You can't just keep doing the same thing over and over again and expect a different outcome and this is the best opportunity that there is out of a crisis to actually provide a long-term solution. 'One in which the states around Israel recognise its right to exist. One which sees a demilitarised state of Palestine.' Albanese said he spoke to Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about Australia's policy shift, saying the world is unhappy with what they are watching playing out. 'Gaza reduced to rubble. Tens of thousands of innocent lives being lost, innocent kids being killed while trying to get basic essentials of food and water. We just can't keep going the same way,' Albanese said. US President Donald Trump has offered stoic support for Israel. Barr questioned Albanese on Trump, if the US decides not to support Palestinian statehood. 'We want to see the world move forward on this and certainly President Trump has been a strong advocate for peace,' Albanese said. 'President Trump will, of course, make decisions based upon the interests of the United States.'


West Australian
18 minutes ago
- West Australian
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says Palestininian state recognition is 'best opportunity' for peace
Palestinian statehood is the best chance for a long-term solution to the Middle East conflict, the prime minister says, despite concerns it could be counterproductive for peace. Anthony Albanese on Monday confirmed Australia would back recognition of a state of Palestine at a United Nations General Assembly meeting in New York in September. The move brings Australia into line with allies such as the United Kingdom, France and Canada, which have already outlined similar plans for recognition. Mr Albanese deflected criticism that recognition would do little on the ground in Gaza, saying a different approach is needed to end the conflict. 'This is the best opportunity that there is out of a crisis to actually provide a long-term solution,' he told Seven's Sunrise program on Tuesday. 'To continue to do the same thing is not enough.' The prime minister said the international community was sending a message, in recognising a Palestinian state, that the status quo in the Middle East could not continue. 'The international community are saying we need to find a solution that provides security for the state of Israel but also recognises the legitimate aspirations of the Palestinian people for their own state,' he said. Foreign Minister Penny Wong said statehood would give the Palestinian people a sense of hope for the future. 'We know this is a hard road to walk, but the alternative is to accept where we are, and I think the international community is saying to both the Israeli and Palestinian peoples we have to find a different path,' she told ABC radio. 'The practical steps for recognition will be tied to the commitments that the Palestinian Authority have made.' The commitments include the assurance that Hamas, which has been designated a terrorist organisation and controls Gaza, will play no role in any future government. Israel has criticised the move, saying it will be counterproductive to peace in the Gaza Strip and its demands for the release of Israeli hostages. Israel's Ambassador to Australia Amir Maimon said Palestinian recognition would 'not change the reality on the ground'. Liberal MP Tim Wilson, whose Victorian seat of Goldstein includes Jewish voters, says Mr Albanese's decision is 'actually immoral'. 'We can't have a situation where we have a government that is kowtowing, literally, to the ambitions of ... terrorists,' he told Nine's Today show, referring to Hamas. 'They're essentially handing over the keys to the kingdom. 'What they've done is actually immoral.' French President Emmanuel Macron praised the decision by Australia on social media, saying it showed a commitment to a two-state solution, which includes the state of Israel. More than two million Palestinians face severe food insecurity, based on United Nations projections. At least 90,000 protesters marched across the Sydney Harbour Bridge earlier in August to call on the government to sanction Israel. The crisis in Gaza began when Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, killing 1200 people and taking about 250 more hostage. Israel's military response has since killed more than 61,000 people, according to Gaza's health authorities. Israel has denied the population is suffering or dying from starvation, even though it has throttled the flow of aid to Gaza for months, international human rights groups have said.