The Telegram (St. John's)

Parliament passes vote after language on Palestinia­n statehood dropped

- DAVID LJUNGGREN

OTTAWA — Parliament passed a non-binding motion late Monday calling on the internatio­nal community to work toward a two-state solution to resolve the conflict between Israel and the Palestinia­ns, in line with government policy.

The vote had been delayed by last-minute wrangling over wording supporting Palestinia­n statehood, an idea that looked set to deepen splits inside the ruling Liberal Party.

The original motion was drawn up by the minority New Democrats, who are helping keep Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal Party in power and are unhappy with what they see as his failure to do enough to protect civilians in Gaza.

The amended motion, which also adopted stronger language against the Palestinia­n militant group Hamas, passed by 204 votes to 117 after most of the Liberal cabinet — including Ya’ara Saks, who is Jewish — and caucus voted in favour.

It was opposed by some Liberal members of Parliament: Anthony Housefathe­r, Ben Carr and Marco Mendicino, a former federal minister.

The initial version called on Canada to “officially recognize the State of Palestine” — a step that no member of the Group of Seven industrial­ized nations has taken.

After back-room negotiatio­ns between the NDP and the Liberals, that wording was dropped in favour of language calling on the internatio­nal community to work toward the establishm­ent of a Palestinia­n state as part of a two-state solution.

But Liberal and opposition legislator­s in the House of Commons complained that they had no notice of the new wording and demanded the chance to debate it, so proceeding­s were briefly suspended.

Last week, Canada said it had paused non-lethal military exports to Israel since January.

Trudeau, while asserting Israel’s right to defend itself, has taken an increasing­ly critical stance over the Israeli military campaign in Hamasrun Gaza after the militant group’s attack on Israel on Oct. 7.

The initial motion had demanded a suspension of all trade in military goods and technology with Israel.

It also urged an immediate ceasefire, an end to illegal arms transfers to Hamas and calls on the group to release all the hostages it took during the Oct. 7 attack.

There had been clear signs of division inside the Liberal caucus over policy toward the Gaza conflict, with prominent backbench legislator­s variously backing and opposing the motion.

Israeli Ambassador Iddo Moed had earlier condemned the original idea of a vote on Palestinia­n statehood, saying it would “only evoke more bloodshed and jeopardize any peaceful resolution to the conflict.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Protesters hold Palestinia­n flags during a rally on Parliament Hill on March 9 to call for a ceasefire amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinia­n Islamist group Hamas in Gaza.
REUTERS Protesters hold Palestinia­n flags during a rally on Parliament Hill on March 9 to call for a ceasefire amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinia­n Islamist group Hamas in Gaza.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada