Spotlight on Keir Starmer’s recognition of Palestine | Letters

I’m puzzled by the conditions Keir Starmer has set for Israel to meet, failing which he’ll recognise Palestine as a state (UK to recognise state of Palestine in September unless Israel holds to a ceasefire, 29 July). Why does recognition depend on Israel’s actions? Surely it should depend on Palestine’s: commitments to abjure terrorism, disarm Hamas, hold democratic elections and, of course, to release the hostages.

As for Israel, UK policy should be to impose draconian sanctions: if Israel continues to act like a pariah state, let it be treated as one. Without sanctions, there would probably still be an apartheid regime in South Africa. The UK must act now, not half-heartedly in September; thousands of children in Gaza can’t wait until then.
Doug Maughan
Dunblane, Perthshire

Like so many people in the UK, I thought that my despair and shame over the situation in Gaza could not be deepened. Keir Starmer achieved that. How like this prime minister to obfuscate further and kick any sense of decisiveness into the long grass of contingency.

One might think that Britain has some special responsibility for recognising the state of Palestine, whose population it abandoned to the predations of its neighbour in 1948. What will be left of Gaza, the West Bank and its people by September? A genocide? A diaspora? The UK doesn’t negotiate with terrorists, just with war criminals.
Emeritus Prof Graham Mort
Lancaster University

Soon after the atrocities of 7 October 2023 I heard someone on the radio say, with respect to Israel’s imminent invasion of Gaza, “Beware of being goaded by your enemy into doing what your enemy wants you to do.” Nearly two years on, the Israeli government seems hell-bent on creating a moral equivalence between itself and Hamas.

If you become like your enemy, then your enemy has won. Thus, despite what it says about recent moves to recognise a Palestinian state, the Israeli government, more than any other, is “rewarding” Hamas for its terrorist actions.
The Rev Rob Kelsey
Berwick-upon-Tweed, Northumberland

It is impossible for us to know the depth of despair Palestinians must feel to hear western nations pontificating that we will not recognise them as a nation if their oppressors stop killing them. It seems this is the ultimate acknowledgment that they have no rights except those we deem to give them. We have expelled them from the land in which they lived to ensure that Europe didn’t have the problem of resettling the thousands displaced by a European war.

They are being attacked in Gaza and the West Bank with weapons supplied by western governments. They are being starved in Gaza to keep their oppressor-in-chief in office. And now our governments are praised for condescending to recognise the fact that they are a nation (that has existed for more than 1,000 years). How can we think we have any integrity left in our dealings with the oppressed?
Michael McLoughlin
Wallington, London

What will give greater weight to the call for a two-state solution is outlining the building blocks for establishment of a Palestinian state: for example, Gaza would be placed under UN control to allow for demilitarisation, the physical reconstruction and drawing up a basic law to guide the development of a constitutional state.
Gavin Weir
Cape Town, South Africa

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