Lethbridge Herald

Trudeau downplays Liberal divisions on Israel-Hamas war, NDP calls for firmer stance

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Diverse views in the Liberal party are a source of strength, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau insisted Thursday as questions persisted about caucus discord over the government’s policy on the Israel-Hamas war.

“We have a large number of Muslim MPs. We have a large number of Jewish MPs,” Trudeau said at a news conference in Winnipeg.

“The kinds of conversati­ons that go on within our party are not always easy, but they reflect the diversity of conversati­ons happening across the country.”

Trudeau was responding to a question about a CBC News report detailing a leaked phone call between a constituen­t and Rob Oliphant, a parliament­ary secretary to Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly.

In that call, Oliphant told the constituen­t that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is “hurting Israel,” CBC reported.

He also criticized the government’s communicat­ion around a genocide allegation against Israel at the Internatio­nal Court of Justice and its decision to pause funding for a UN agency as it investigat­es staff members accused of involvemen­t in the Oct. 7 attack on Israel.

On Parliament Hill, NDP foreign-affairs critic Heather McPherson said Oliphant should be brave enough to say such things publicly. He told CBC he didn’t say anything on the call he would not be willing to defend in public.

Asked whether Oliphant should resign, McPherson said the Toronto MP “is the only one saying the right things, albeit privately.”

“I don’t understand how this government can have people within their own caucus that are calling for us to adhere to internatio­nal law, to adhere to the rules of humanitari­an law, and the government’s not listening,” she said.

“It feels very much to me like a very Liberal thing to say one thing publicly and to say a different thing privately.”

The prime minister did not specifical­ly refer to Oliphant on Thursday.

World leaders, he said, are actively discussing how best to respond if Israel proceeds with a major offensive in the southern Gaza city where most of the population has taken shelter.

Trudeau said in French that he is “very preoccupie­d” by the situation as it unfolds.

The planned offensive in the city of Rafah was discussed in a conversati­on between the prime minister and a member of Israel’s war cabinet on Thursday.

A readout of Trudeau’s call with minister Benny Gantz said the prime minister expressed concern about the “severe humanitari­an implicatio­ns” for civilians in the area.

In a joint statement late Wednesday with the prime ministers of Australia and New Zealand, Trudeau said an Israeli military offensive into Rafah would be “catastroph­ic.”

The message marked Canada’s strongest language yet on Israel’s conduct in the Gaza Strip, more than four months into its war with Hamas.

“There is growing internatio­nal consensus. Israel must listen to its friends and it must listen to the internatio­nal community,” the statement said.

“The protection of civilians is paramount and a requiremen­t under internatio­nal humanitari­an law. Palestinia­n civilians cannot be made to pay the price of defeating Hamas.”

Still, McPherson said she thought the statement was “very watered down” and by not doing more, “Canada is potentiall­y complicit in a genocide.”

The war began when Hamas militants burst through Israel’s formidable defences on Oct. 7 and rampaged through several communitie­s, killing some 1,200 people and taking another 250 hostage.

More than 100 of the captives were freed during a ceasefire last year in exchange for 240 Palestinia­n prisoners.

Israel responded to the Oct. 7 attack by launching one of the deadliest and most destructiv­e military campaigns in recent history.

Officials in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip say more than 28,000 Palestinia­ns have been killed.

Four-fifths of the population have fled their homes and a quarter are starving amid a worsening humanitari­an catastroph­e. Large areas in northern Gaza, the first target of the offensive, have been completely destroyed.

— With files from The Associated Press

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO ?? A Palestinai­n buy pulls a cart in Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, Thursday. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says diverse views in his caucus are a source of strength, amid questions about divisions in the Liberal party over the government’s policy on the Israel-Hamas war.
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO A Palestinai­n buy pulls a cart in Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, Thursday. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says diverse views in his caucus are a source of strength, amid questions about divisions in the Liberal party over the government’s policy on the Israel-Hamas war.

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