Ireland likely to recognise Palestine after Israeli settlements push

Dublin is set to officially recognise a Palestinian state, following the Knesset's decision to legalise thousands of settlement homes on Palestinian land

The Israeli settlement of Ma'ale Adumim, 4.3 miles from Jerusalem.

Ireland will likely recognise a Palestinian state, Israel’s ambassador to the country reportedly warned in a cable to Jerusalem.

Zeev Boker sent the cautionary dispatch Tuesday, Haaretz reported. Israel had already expected Dublin would officially recognise Palestine, and the Knesset’s recent passage of a law to legalise thousands of West Bank settlements strengthened that assessment, an Israeli official told the Israeli daily.

Lawmakers on Monday passed the “regulation law,” which allows the government to seize land on which settlements were built, as long as the settlers were not aware of the status of the land. The Palestinian landowners are entitled to compensation.

The law has been condemned by states around the world, as well as by the United Nations, the European Union and the Palestinians. But the United States has stayed silent. White House spokesman Sean Spicer said Tuesday that it “will be obviously a topic of discussion” when President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meet later this month.

The Israeli official said Boker proposed working to block the move by having Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu call his Irish counterpart, Enda Kenny, and by asking the Trump administration to intervene, according to Haaretz.

In separate 2014 motions, the Upper and Lower Houses of Ireland’s parliament urged their government to recognise a state of Palestine, and Irish ministers later said they were considering the matter.

Ireland was the first European country to recognise the Palestine Liberation Organisation and has traditionally been one of Israel’s harshest critics in the EU.

 

 

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