
Labour minister grilled over Gaza in tense BBC interview
Kyle said Keir Starmer had been 'intensely moved and disturbed' by images coming from the enclave but defended the continued sale of arms to Israel.
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The presenter challenged the timing of the UK Government's reaction, asking why it had taken Starmer so long to be moved given how long the Palestinian genocide has been going on for.
Kyle pushed back firmly, saying Starmer has been 'deeply, deeply moved and disturbed by what he has seen,' insisting the Prime Minister had already taken 'incredible action' by working with international partners by recognising the International Criminal Court and sanctioning figures, including members of Benjamin Netanyahu's government and individuals in the West Bank.
However, the presenter referenced earlier comments from the SNP's Stephen Gethins, who pointed out the UK Government continues to supply arms to Israel – including parts of F-35 fighter jets.
Kyle squirmed as he responded, insisting arms sales were 'under constant review' and claiming that 'British law is applied equally to all areas and all territories'.
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The presenter suggested Labour's pledge to recognise Palestinian statehood – which Starmer continues to drag his heels on despite growing pressure from his own MPs – was nothing more than an 'empty gesture'.
Kyle retorted: 'I'm saying nothing of the sort … what we are trying to do is deliver a statehood that has meaning.'
Asked repeatedly when Labour would fulfil the commitment, Kyle refused to provide a timeframe, saying: 'What you're asking me to do is to release the contents of a meeting that hasn't happened yet.'
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The Independent
3 minutes ago
- The Independent
Minister ties herself in knots over conditions for recognition of Palestine
The transport secretary tied herself in knots when she was faced with questions over the conditions for the recognition of Palestine, following pushback to the government's announcement. There has been growing backlash to the position, with the government facing criticism for using Palestinian statehood as leverage, as well as confusion over whether the release of the hostages held by Hamas will be one of the conditions for recognition. Sir Keir Starmer confirmed on Tuesday that the UK will recognise a Palestinian state by September unless Israel takes urgent steps to end the war in Gaza. The UK will only refrain from doing so if Israel allows more aid into Gaza, stops annexing land in the West Bank, agrees to a ceasefire and signs up to a long-term peace process over the next two months. Hamas, the Palestinian militant group, must immediately release all remaining Israeli hostages, sign up to a ceasefire, disarm and 'accept that they will play no part in the government of Gaza', Sir Keir also said. But, pressed on the issue, the transport secretary could not say whether the release of the hostages was a condition. Heidi Alexander said ministers have 'always said right from day one that the hostages need to be released', adding that the UK expects 'Hamas to act in the same way as we expect Israel to act'. 'Hamas need to release the hostages, they need to disarm, and they also need to accept that they will have no future role in the governance of Gaza,' she told BBC Radio 4's Today programme. 'They are a vile terrorist organisation that has perpetrated heinous crimes and awful atrocities on the Israeli people.' But asked directly if the release of hostages is a condition for recognition, she said: 'We will be making an assessment in September.' She added: 'We're giving Israel eight weeks to act. If they want to be sat at the table to shape that enduring peace in the region, they must act.' Also asked about the issue on Sky News, she added: 'This isn't about Hamas, this is actually about delivering for the Palestinian people and making sure that we can get aid in.' It came after Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sir Keir's announcement rewards 'Hamas's monstrous terrorism'. In a statement on the social media site X, Israel's prime minister added: 'Appeasement towards jihadist terrorists always fails.' Donald Trump, who met Sir Keir on Monday and discussed measures to end the starvation faced by Gazans, suggested the pair had not talked about recognising Palestinian statehood. But Mr Trump said he did not mind the PM 'taking a position' on the issue. Other figures within the US administration have taken a harder line on recognising Palestine. US state department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce suggested a UN conference called to discuss recognising a Palestinian state as part of a two-state solution was a 'publicity stunt' and called it a 'slap in the face' to the victims of the October 7 attacks. She also suggested that the UK announcement could risk 'rewarding Hamas'. Sir Keir said the government's 'primary aim' was getting aid into Gaza and getting hostages released when asked why UK recognition of the state of Palestine was conditional. He added he was 'particularly concerned that the very idea of a two-state solution is reducing and feels further away today than it has for many, many years'. While Sir Keir signalled the UK could back away from recognising a Palestinian state if his conditions are met, No 10 is understood to believe that such a two-state solution would also proceed from negotiations towards a sustained peace.


Evening Standard
3 minutes ago
- Evening Standard
Minister won't say if terror group Hamas has to release Israeli hostages for UK to recognise Palestinian state
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The Guardian
3 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Keir Starmer faces pushback after announcing UK will recognise state of Palestine unless Gaza crisis ends
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