After Norway, Ireland, Spain nod, France gives condition for recognising Palestinian state
France’s Foreign Minister Stéphane Séjourné has rejected the idea of recognising Palestine as a state at the moment.
“Our position is clear: recognition of Palestine is not taboo for France,” the minister said on Wednesday after a meeting with his Israeli counterpart Israel Katz in Paris.
The minister, however, said that decision in favour of the recognition must be beneficial and would be made at the right time.
He said that such a decision should enable decisive progress at the political level.
“It is not just a symbolic question or a question of political positioning, but a diplomatic instrument in the service of a solution with two states living side-by-side in peace and security.
“France does not believe that the conditions have been met to date for this decision to have a real impact on this process,” Séjourné said.
Earlier on Wednesday, Norway, Ireland and Spain said they would recognise Palestine as a state on May 28.
Katz’s visit to Paris followed France’s position in favour of the International Criminal Court (ICC), which chief prosecutor applied for arrest warrants on Monday against Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister Yoav Gallant.
The Paris Foreign Ministry stated that it supported the ICC, its independence and the fight against impunity in all situations.
After the meeting with Katz, Séjourné wrote on X: “I reaffirmed France’s priorities: immediate release of the hostages, ceasefire, massive humanitarian aid and two states living in peace and security.”
(dpa/NAN)