Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

British parliament to vote on Palestine

- Agence France-presse

LONDON: British lawmakers will hold a symbolic parliament­ary vote on Monday on whether the government should recognise Palestine as a state, a move unlikely to shift official policy but designed to raise the political profile of the issue.

Britain does not class Palestine as a state, but says it could do so at any time if it believed it would help the longrunnin­g peace process between the Palestinia­ns and Israel. The motion due for debate in Britain’s lower house of parliament, put forward by a lawmaker from the opposition Labour party, will ask parliament­arians whether they believe the government should recognise the state of Palestine.

It has the backing of the left-leaning Labour party’s leadership which has told its lawmakers to vote in favour of the motion, an edict which has caused anger with some pro-israel members of parliament set to rebel or stay away altogether.

Other parties are allowing their lawmakers to vote according to their own conscience­s. Government ministers are expected to abstain.

Even if a majority of the House of Commons’ 650 lawmakers do back the motion, it is non-binding and would not force the British government to changes its diplomatic stance.

Sayeeda Warsi, a lawmaker from Prime Minister David Cameron’s Conservati­ve party who quit her ministeria­l post in August after accusing the government of taking a “morally indefensib­le” approach to the conflict between Israel and Hamas, said she hoped the motion would pass.

“There is a lack of political will and our moral compass is missing,” the former Foreign Office minister said of the government’s policies towards Israel and Palestine.

“There are no negotiatio­ns, there is no show in town. Somehow we have to breathe new life into these negotiatio­ns, and one of the ways we can do that is by recognisin­g the state of Palestine,” she told The Observer newspaper on Sunday. The debate comes as Sweden’s new centre-left government is set to officially recognise Palestine, a move that has been criticised by Israel.

The U.N. General Assembly approved the de facto recognitio­n of the sovereign state of Palestine in 2012 but the European Union and most EU countries, including Britain, have yet to give official recognitio­n.

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