logo
Wong criticises Israel's conduct in Gaza in closed-door meeting with Israeli ambassador

Wong criticises Israel's conduct in Gaza in closed-door meeting with Israeli ambassador

The Guardian3 days ago
In a private meeting with Israel's ambassador to Australia, the foreign affairs minister, Penny Wong, criticised Israel's conduct in Gaza and called for it to urgently comply with international law and increase the supply of food to Palestinians.
Wong's Thursday meeting with Amir Maimon was requested by the Israeli embassy, according to federal government sources, and took place inside Wong's office at Parliament House in Canberra.
The meeting was held days after Australia joined 27 other countries in condemning Israel for denying humanitarian aid to Palestinians.
At the time, Wong said the decision to sign the statement reflected the 'concern' and 'distress' Australians felt from seeing the images of starving Palestinians in Gaza.
Sign up: AU Breaking News email
The Thursday discussion followed another meeting between Maimon and lower-level foreign affairs officials in Canberra earlier in the week, as reported by the Nine Newspapers.
Australian sources said Wong repeated her public criticism of Israel's conduct in Gaza during the meeting with Maimon. This included a request for Israel to comply with international law and ensure enough food was being provided to Palestinians.
Wong's office declined to comment on the meeting, and the Israeli embassy has been contacted for comment.
Before both meetings took place, the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, accused Israel of 'clearly' breaching international law and said Benjamin Netanyahu's government was 'losing support' internationally.
After those comments, Wong said: 'It is forbidden to withhold aid from civilians, that is not consistent with international law, but actually, just as importantly, it's morally the wrong thing to do.'
Earlier in the week, a select group of journalists attended a briefing at the Israeli embassy where Israel's deputy ambassador, Amir Meron, reportedly said: 'We don't recognise any famine or any starvation in the Gaza Strip.'
In response, Albanese said that statement was 'beyond comprehension' and raised concerns about Israel restricting journalists from visiting the war-torn Palestinian territory.
Dozens of Palestinians have died of hunger in recent weeks in a crisis attributed by the UN and other humanitarian organisations to Israel's blockade of almost all aid into the territory.
Two Israeli-based rights groups this week declared that Israel was committing genocide in Gaza, with reports citing evidence including the weaponisation of hunger. B'tselem described an 'official and openly declared policy' of mass starvation.
Sign up to Breaking News Australia
Get the most important news as it breaks
after newsletter promotion
On Wednesday, Australia joined 14 other countries in describing the recognition of Palestine as 'an essential step towards the two-state solution', linking progress on statehood to the upcoming United Nations general assembly meeting in September.
But Albanese also criticised calls for further actions against Israel as 'slogans' as he faced intensifying pressure from his MPs, Labor members and the Greens to reconsider his position on the war and humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
He has so far stopped short of matching his UK counterpart Keir Starmer's promise to recognise the state of Palestine in September unless Israel abides by a ceasefire and commits to a two-state solution.
'What I've said is that it's not the timeline, that's not what we're looking at. What we're looking at is the circumstances where recognition will advance the objective of the creation of two states,' Albanese said on Wednesday, a day before Wong met Maimon.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Absolutely the best ship': Japan wins $10bn contract to grow Australia's war fleet
‘Absolutely the best ship': Japan wins $10bn contract to grow Australia's war fleet

The Guardian

time39 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

‘Absolutely the best ship': Japan wins $10bn contract to grow Australia's war fleet

Japan's Mitsubishi Heavy Industries has beaten a German rival in the race to build Australia's new fleet of warships, with the federal government expecting the first to be ready for service by 2030. Australia will spend $10bn over a decade to buy three Mogami-class frigates, part of a wider deal to replace the ageing Anzac-class frigates and give the navy a bigger and more lethal surface combatant fleet. The first three will be built in Japan by 2034, before construction moves to the Henderson naval precinct in Western Australia. Sign up: AU Breaking News email The Mogami operates with about 90 crew, down from about 120 on the current generation of warships. It is currently in service for the Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force. The defence minister, Richard Marles, and defence industry minister, Pat Conroy, would not say what the estimated total cost of the program will be, citing upcoming commercial negotiations with Mitsubishi. Marles said geopolitical tensions with China did not play a role in the decision, which was signed off on Monday night by cabinet's national security committee. 'The Mogami is absolutely the best ship and that was very clear in all the advice that we received,' Marles said. 'It is a next-generation vessel. It is stealthy, it has 32 vertical launch cells capable of launching long-range missiles, it has a highly capable radar, it has a highly capable sonar.' German firm TKMS – previously branded as ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems – had been considered for the deal, but its Meko A-200 vessel was considered second best to the Japanese model, including over concerns about the timeline for delivery and putting the ships into service. Japan has not previously manufactured frigates for other nations, while TKMS has sold to navies around the world. Both bids included heavy lobbying of the federal government. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese met with his Japanese counterpart, Shigeru Ishiba, on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Canada in June, as well as with Germany's chancellor, Olaf Scholz. Defence is expected to enter into binding, commercial contracts for the deal by 2026. Marles said Japan beat out the German option based on capability of the new vessels. 'We do have a very close strategic alignment with Japan. There's no other country in the world that is quite as aligned with Australia as Japan.' Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion The Mogami frigate has a range of up to 10,000 nautical miles, is fitted with surface-to-air missiles and anti-ship missiles and comes with sophisticated vertical launch capability. 'In terms of cost, capability and meeting our schedule of delivery, the Mogami-class frigate was the clear winner,' Conroy said. He said the US-made Lockheed Martin combat system and a Japanese-made radar system would be replaced with Australian systems, but no other changes would be permitted without approval of the Defence department boss and chief of the defence force, in consultation with the federal government. 'This is a lesson we've learnt from previous acquisitions and guarantees speed to capability,' Conroy said. This will help make good on our commitment to deliver four times as many warships in the next 10 years, compared to the Coalition's plan.' Marles and Conroy also announced plans for a new strategic shipbuilding agreement with a new arm of the government-controlled shipbuilding company, Austal Defence Shipbuilding Australia Pty Ltd. Based at Fremantle, Austal is the only major shipbuilder with operations in Australia. It will build 18 new medium landing crafts for Defence, as well as eight heavy vessels. That deal is currently being negotiated with the federal government.

No 10 declines to say if Palestine will be recognised with Hamas in power
No 10 declines to say if Palestine will be recognised with Hamas in power

Sky News

timean hour ago

  • Sky News

No 10 declines to say if Palestine will be recognised with Hamas in power

The prime minister's spokesman has refused eight times to confirm whether recognition of Palestine could go ahead if Hamas remain in power and the hostages are not released. Keir Starmer's spokesman was questioned by journalists for the first time since the announcement last week that the UK will formally recognise the state in September - unless Israel meets certain conditions including abiding by a ceasefire and increasing aid. The policy has been criticised by the families of UK hostages, campaigners and some Labour MPs, who argue it would reward Hamas and say it should be conditional on the release of the remaining hostages. A senior Hamas politician, Ghazi Hamad, speaking to Al Jazeera, said at the weekend that major nations' decision to recognise a Palestinian state "is one of the fruits of 7 October". The PM's spokesman said on Monday: "The PM is clear that on 7 October, Hamas committed the worst act of terror in Israel's history. That horror has continued since then. "As the foreign secretary said over the weekend, Hamas are rightly pariahs who can have no role in Gaza's future, there is a diplomatic consensus on that. Hamas must immediately release all hostages and have no role in the governance of Gaza." But asked whether removing Hamas from power and releasing hostages were conditions for statehood, he said a decision on recognition would be made at the UN General Assembly meeting in September, based on "an assessment of how far the parties have met the steps we have set out. No one side will have veto on recognition through their actions or inactions." 2:25 He added: "Our focus is on the immediate situation on the ground, getting more aid in to end the suffering in Gaza and supporting a ceasefire and a long-term peace for Israelis and Palestinians based a two-state solution." Starmer, who recalled his cabinet for an emergency meeting last week before setting out the new position, is following the lead of French president Emmanuel Macron, who first pledged to move toward recognising Palestinian statehood in April. Canada has also backed recognition if conditions are met, including by the Palestinian Authority. The prime minister had previously said he would recognise a state of Palestine as part of a contribution to a peace process. 3:05 In his announcement last Tuesday, he said: "We need to see at least 500 trucks entering Gaza every day. But ultimately, the only way to bring this humanitarian crisis to an end is through a long-term settlement. "So we are supporting the US, Egyptian and Qatari efforts to secure a vital ceasefire. That ceasefire must be sustainable and it must lead to a wider peace plan, which we are developing with our international partners. "I've always said we will recognise a Palestinian state as a contribution to a proper peace process, at the moment of maximum impact for the two-state solution. With that solution now under threat, this is the moment to act." Adam Rose, a lawyer acting for British families of hostages in Gaza, has said: "Why would Hamas agree to a ceasefire if it knew that to do so would make British recognition of Palestine less likely?"

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