
Macron presses for recognition of Palestine as ‘only path to peace'
He said: 'We are aware that a political way out is crucial, and I believe in the future of the two-state solution as a basis for regional security architecture which will enable Israel to live in peace and security alongside its neighbours.
French president Emmanuel Macron said a ceasefire was a matter of 'absolute urgency' (Alistair Grant/PA)
'But I want to be clear, calling today for a ceasefire in Gaza without any condition, is just telling to the rest of the world that for us as Europeans, there is no double standard, and as we are attached to human lives, as we are attached to territorial integrity, we want the ceasefire, no discussion.
'And today, working together in order to recognise the state of Palestine and to initiate this political momentum is the only path to peace.'
David Lammy had earlier refused to set a time frame for when the UK would recognise Palestinian statehood.
The Foreign Secretary was asked at the Commons Foreign Affairs Committee when the timing would be right to recognise statehood.
He said: 'I'm not going to set it to a set time frame, because I've explained that this is a moving, live situation.
Foreign Secretary David Lammy said he was in talks with French and Saudi colleagues on recognition (Stefan Rousseau/PA)
'There are delicate ceasefire negotiations under way. I've explained the issues that sit within that, and whether we will get a… ceasefire. I'm hopeful that we will.'
Mr Lammy said he was in talks with French and Saudi colleagues on recognition, but that he wanted to see change on the ground.
He said that 'despite the recognition movement, actually what we've seen is further annexation on the West Bank' and 'it has not led to get us getting closer to a process, it's led to further annexation'.
Mr Lammy said he 'would prefer it was part of the process' and that he believed 'our French colleagues are also waiting to see if there is, in fact, a ceasefire in the next few days' to kickstart a process and that the UK Government remained 'completely committed' to recognition.
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North Wales Chronicle
30 minutes ago
- North Wales Chronicle
34 Palestinians and Israeli soldier killed in Gaza
The Israeli military also announced a soldier was killed in Gaza. The fighting in Gaza has shown no sign of slowing as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with US President Donald Trump in Washington this week to work on a US-led ceasefire plan. Hopes for an agreement in the near term appeared to be fading as Mr Netanyahu prepared to return to Israel. Mr Netanyahu is holding firm to the idea that Hamas must be destroyed, while Hamas wants a complete end to the war following the proposed 60-day truce. Gaza's Nasser Hospital reported a total of 21 deaths in air strikes in the southern town of Khan Younis and the nearby coastal area of Muwasi. It said three children and their mother, as well as two additional women, were among the dead. In central Gaza, at least 13 people were killed in the city of Deir al-Balah, including at least 10 people waiting to receive nutritional supplements at a medical clinic early on Thursday, according to Project Hope, an aid group that runs the clinic. Two women and five children were among the dead. 'This is just a tragedy, it is a violation of the humanitarian laws. No child waiting for food and medicine should face the risk of being bombed,' said Dr Mithqal Abutaha, the group's project manager, who was at another clinic at the time. 'It was a horrific scene,' he added. 'People had to come seeking health and support, instead they faced death.' He said the clinic, a humanitarian facility well known to all parties, was mildly damaged and will be closed for several days. The Israeli military said it struck near the medical centre when it was targeting a militant who had infiltrated into Israel on October 7 2023. It said it was investigating. Additionally, the military said Israeli troops have been working in Khan Younis to dismantle more than 130 Hamas infrastructure sites over the past week, including a 500-metre tunnel, missile launch sites, and weapons storage facilities. Over the past 24 hours, massive explosions in Gaza sent plumes of smoke into the sky and were visible from the border with Israel. On Thursday, the Israeli military announced that a soldier was killed in Khan Younis a day earlier after militants burst out of an underground tunnel and tried to abduct him. The soldier was shot and killed, while troops in the area shot the militants, hitting several of them, the military said. Eighteen soldiers have been killed in the past three weeks, one of the deadliest periods for the Israeli army in months, putting additional public pressure on Mr Netanyahu to end the war. An Israeli man in his 20s was killed during an attack at an Israeli supermarket in a settlement in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Thursday afternoon, according to Israel's Magen David Adom emergency rescue services. Magen David Adom said two people attacked Israeli shoppers with knives, before security guards on site shot them. Earlier on Thursday, a 55-year-old Palestinian man was killed in the West Bank, the Palestinian Health Ministry. The Israeli military said the man was shot after stabbing a soldier in the village of Rumana. The soldier suffered moderate wounds. The war in Gaza has sparked a surge of violence in the West Bank, with the Israeli military carrying out large-scale operations targeting militants that have killed hundreds of Palestinians and displaced tens of thousands. That has coincided with a rise in settler violence and Palestinian attacks on Israelis. Palestinian militants from the West Bank have also attacked and killed Israelis in Israel and the West Bank as tensions simmer. The war began after Hamas attacked Israel in 2023, killing around 1,200 people and taking 251 others hostage. Most have been released in earlier ceasefires. Israel responded with an offensive that has killed more than 57,000 Palestinians, more than half of them women and children, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. The ministry, which is under Gaza's Hamas-run government, does not differentiate between civilians and combatants. The UN and other international organisations see its figures as the most reliable statistics on war casualties. Meanwhile, Israel began demolitions on Thursday of more than a dozen buildings in the central city of Bat Yam, which saw the deadliest Iranian missile strike during the 12-day Israel-Iran war. Nine people were killed, including five members of the same family, in Bat Yam. The family were Ukrainian refugees who fled the war and came to Israel for medical treatment, according to Israeli media. Bat Yam mayor Tzvika Brot said the strike left 2,000 people – more than 1% of the city's population – homeless. Many are now living at hotels. 'We're going to demolish 20 buildings, but we're going to build them better, stronger, and there will be much more Israeli families running around here. That will be the best answer to our enemies,' he added. More than 15,000 Israelis were displaced from their homes due to damage from Iranian missiles, according to the Prime Minister's Office. Iran launched 550 missiles and more than 1,000 drones towards Israel, killing 28 people, and injuring more than 3,000. Iran's government said this week that at least 1,060 Iranians were killed in the war.


Spectator
35 minutes ago
- Spectator
It's crunch time for Starmer's ‘one in, one out' migrant deal
The entente is still very much cordiale. Talks between Keir Starmer and Emmanuel Macron are ongoing on the third day of the Anglo-French summit. The key issue is migration: how best to stop the constant flow of Channel crossings that have seen 20,000 arrive here this year already? Like Rwanda, this deal faces numerous practical and political hurdles Both, publicly, are singing from the same hymn sheet, with lashings of Gallic sweetness. In remarks this morning, the French President praised the relationship between London and Paris. Both nations, he insisted, share 'the same resolve to fight' people smugglers. The Prime Minister spoke, again, of 'new tactics' and a 'new intent to tackle illegal migration and break the business model of the criminal gangs'. The big solution, expected to be unveiled later today, is a 'one-in, one-out' deal. For each individual taken back, France would transfer one asylum seeker to the UK, who would likely be someone with a family connection or genuine reason to seek sanctuary here. British officials are, understandably, pushing for a high number; the French are believed to be more resistant. The hope is that if a return deal works, it would deter future crossings, allowing Starmer to claim that he, finally, has 'stopped the boats'. Of course, like Rwanda, this deal faces numerous practical and political hurdles. Who decides who comes in and out? What does the deal mean for the EU and the Dublin Convention? Is such a deal even legal under the UN Refugee Convention? Expect those questions and more to be put to Starmer and Macron when they appear at a joint press conference later today.


North Wales Chronicle
43 minutes ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Macron says UK and France ‘share same will' amid crunch talks over migrant deal
The French president said the UK and France 'share the same will' to address the issue at the start of a Franco-British summit at Downing Street. It came after the pair said a 'new deterrent' was needed to stop small boats crossing the English Channel. The Prime Minister hopes the French president will sign up to a 'one in, one out' deal on Thursday, the last day of Mr Macron's state visit to the UK. Under the terms of the deal, Britain would accept migrants with links to the country in exchange for sending others back across the Channel. Sir Keir said the meeting was about working together on shared priorities. He said: 'For us, it's about delivering the changes that the British people want to see, and we will agree the situation in the Channel cannot go on as it is. 'So we're bringing new tactics into play and a new level of intent to tackle illegal migration and break the business model of the criminal gangs.' Speaking in French, Mr Macron said: 'We share the same will to tackle networks of illegal immigration through great co-ordination with other European countries. 'We have often mentioned France is the last destination before Great Britain for these men and women who often journey through paths of misery and are exploited by traffickers. 'We will work with countries of first entry in Europe (as) our intention is also to engage all countries who share a responsibility alongside us.' Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, Chancellor Rachel Reeves and Energy Secretary Ed Miliband were also at the summit. Defence Secretary John Healey, who was also at the summit, told ITV's Good Morning Britain that footage of French authorities puncturing a migrant dinghy to stop it from setting off last week was a 'recognition' that France has agreed to change its rules to intervene in shallow waters. To reduce small boat crossings, he said those changes need to be 'fully implemented' alongside new legislation, building up the new border security command, and any steps to be announced by Sir Keir and Mr Macron after the summit. French newspaper Le Monde has reported that some 50 migrants a week would initially be returned to France under the terms of the proposed deal, which it described as largely symbolic. If such a deal were struck, it would only result in the return of a fraction of the 21,000 people who have made the Channel crossing so far in 2025, a record for this point in a year. But it would also represent a concession by the French that such returns are possible, after years of MPs on the right of British politics insisting France is a 'safe' country where migrants can be sent back to. The Times reported the scheme would be scaled up after an initial pilot had shown 'proof of concept', citing Government sources. In return, Mr Macron is said to be pushing for the UK to do more to address 'pull factors' which are attracting people to make the dangerous crossing to the English coast. When Mr Macron and Sir Keir met in Downing Street on Wednesday, the small boats crisis appeared to be the mainstay of their conversations. The pair agreed the crossings are a 'shared priority that requires shared solutions', a Downing Street spokesperson said. They also agreed on the need for a 'new deterrent to break the business model of these gangs' and are aiming for 'concrete progress' on the matter. Following the French-UK summit, the two leaders will host a call with coalition of the willing partners, the proposed peacekeeping mission to deter Russia from attacking Ukraine in future. In a sign of close alignment on defence, Britain and France have announced they will buy new supplies of Storm Shadow missiles, which both have loaned to Ukraine to strike targets deep inside Russia. The two nations will also work closely to develop a successor to the long-range missile, the Ministry of Defence said.