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Australian government to recognise West Jerusalem as Israel's capital Australian government to recognise West Jerusalem as Israel's capital
(34 minutes later)
The Australian government will formally recognise West Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, but the embassy will not be moved from Tel Aviv until the city’s status is finalised under a peace settlement. Australia will become one of the few countries to formally recognise West Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, but will not move its embassy from Tel Aviv until a peace settlement is reached.
The prime minister, Scott Morrison, will announce the foreign policy shift in a speech to the Sydney Institute on Saturday, the Australian newspaper reports. The prime minister, Scott Morrison, said the government will also recognise a future state of Palestine with its capital in East Jerusalem after a settlement has been reached on a two-state solution. The foreign policy shift was set to be announced during Morrison’s speech to the Sydney Institute on Saturday.
The government will also commit to recognising a future state of Palestine with its capital in East Jerusalem after a settlement has been reached on a two-state solution.
Morrison is also expected to say the more controversial relocation of the Australian embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem will be delayed until a peace settlement is reached.
Palestinians call on Muslim states to target Australian exports over Jerusalem embassyPalestinians call on Muslim states to target Australian exports over Jerusalem embassy
Palestinian leaders are already lobbying Arab and other Muslim states to drop Australian exports and withdraw their ambassadors from Canberra in the event of an embassy move to Jerusalem. Last week Palestinian leaders were lobbying Arab and other Muslim states to drop Australian exports and withdraw their ambassadors from Canberra in the event of an embassy move to Jerusalem.
While the embassy move is delayed, the government will establish a defence and trade office in Jerusalem and start looking for an embassy site. While the government has delayed the more controversial embassy relocation, Australia will establish a defence and trade office in Jerusalem and start looking for an embassy site.
In October, Australia’s spy agency Asio warned any embassy move may “provoke protest, unrest and possibly some violence in Gaza and the West Bank”. When the US embassy opened in Jerusalem in May it sparked protests in Gaza which left 58 Palestinians dead and 1,200 wounded. Morrison will say in his speech on Saturday: “The Australian government has decided that Australia now recognises West Jerusalem as the seat of the Knesset [Israel’s parliament] and many of the institutions of government is the capital of Israel. And we look forward to moving our embassy to West Jerusalem when practical, in support of, and after, final-status determination.”
According to the Australian newspaper, Morrison will say in his speech on Saturday: “The Australian government has decided that Australia now recognises West Jerusalem as the seat of the Knesset [Israel’s legislative body] and many of the institutions of government is the capital of Israel. And we look forward to moving our embassy to West Jerusalem when practical, in support of, and after, final-status determination.” In May, when the United States moved its embassy to Jerusalem, the relocation was condemned by US allies, Palestinian leaders and the Muslim world. It sparked massive protests in Gaza which resulted in the deaths of 58 Palestinians. Ever since Donald Trump’s declaration in December last year, Israel has been pushing hard to persuade other countries to follow.
In May, when the US moved its embassy to Jerusalem, it sparked massive protests in Gaza which resulted in the deaths of 58 Palestinians. Ever since Donald Trump’s declaration in December last year, Israel has been pushing hard to persuade other countries to follow. On Saturday the president of the Australia Palestine Advocacy Network, Bishop George Browning, said Morrison’s announcement was “a tortuous attempt to salvage himself from a pre-emptive thought bubble prior to the Wentworth byelection”.
On Saturday the Greens leader, Richard Di Natale, described Morrison’s announcement as “Trumpesque in its stupidity”. The embassy move idea was first floated by Morrison in October in the week leading up to the byelection in Wentworth an electorate where 12.5% of the population is Jewish, according to the 2016 Census. The byelection was ultimately won by Kerryn Phelps, who beat Liberal candidate Dave Sharma, who is not Jewish but was a former ambassador to Israel.
“Once again we are blindly following Donald Trump’s dangerous foreign policy agenda, with a decision that has already been near universally rejected by the United Nations, European and Middle Eastern leaders and religious leaders,” Di Natale said. “The best one can say is the announcement is not as catastrophic as many feared,” Browning said. “The problem with it is that it ignores the reality that Israel has passed a new state law which declares Jerusalem to be Israel’s eternal and undivided capital.
“Like the rest of the sensible international community, the Greens unequivocally condemn today’s decision. The best way to advance the prospect of peace in Israel and Palestine is to recognise a Palestinian state.” “In other words Australia may somewhat pompously say it is all fine, we are only moving into West Jerusalem Israel considers Jerusalem to be undivided. If the prime minister’s words are to have any meaning he and Australia will need to be far more proactive if necessary through sanctions and boycotts to pressure Israel into a genuine commitment to peace and the recognition of Palestinian rights, specifically in East Jerusalem.”
Morrison said he was “open to” to the move in October, describing it as a “sensible” proposal. In a series of tweets on Tuesday, senior Palestinian official Saeb Erekat urged the Australian government to “stay the course with international law and agreements signed between Palestinians and Israelis”. On Tuesday morning, Erekat wrote: “I call upon all Arab and Muslim countries to sever all relations with with Australia, if it recognises Jerusalem as Israel’s capital,” adding that Arab and Muslim countries had adopted a resolution to cut ties with any country to do so.
An evangelical Christian, he immediately faced questions about whether his religious views had played a part in his decision to float the proposal. “My faith and religion has nothing to do with this decision,” he said. There are serious concerns Morrison’s announcement could have trade implications, with Saudi Arabia the largest importer of live meat from Australia, and that it could also jeopardise the signing of a critical free-trade deal with Indonesia.
In October, the former deputy prime minister, Barnaby Joyce, warned the government has “got to be careful” around Israel policy, because many countries that import Australian agricultural exports including Indonesia, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Jordan have “lots of sensitivities here”.
In October, Australia’s spy agency Asio warned any embassy move may “provoke protest, unrest and possibly some violence in Gaza and the West Bank”.
On Saturday the Australian Greens leader, Richard Di Natale, described Morrison’s announcement as “irresponsible”, adding: “The best way to advance the prospect of peace in Israel and Palestine is to recognise a Palestinian state …
“The fact that [Morrison] has refused to back down in the face of overwhelming criticism, including from his own hand-picked advisory panel, is Trumpesque in its stupidity,” Di Natale said.
“The Greens have said time and time again that recognition of West Jerusalem as Israel’s capital is another body blow for the peace process and for the Palestinian people. This decision rewards Israel’s Netanyahu government for policies like rampant settlement building that not only break international law but also severely diminish the prospects of peace.”
In October, Morrison said he was “open to” to the move in October, describing it as a “sensible” proposal. An evangelical Christian, he immediately faced questions about whether his religious views had played a part in his decision to float the proposal. “My faith and religion has nothing to do with this decision,” he said.
Wentworth byelection: Jewish voters split over embassy switch to JerusalemWentworth byelection: Jewish voters split over embassy switch to Jerusalem
Instead, he argued the status quo in Israeli-Palestinian relations had failed to make headway. “The orthodoxy that’s driven this debate which says issues like considering the question of the capital are taboo. I think we have to challenge that,” he said.Instead, he argued the status quo in Israeli-Palestinian relations had failed to make headway. “The orthodoxy that’s driven this debate which says issues like considering the question of the capital are taboo. I think we have to challenge that,” he said.
The embassy move idea was first floated by Morrison in October in the week leading up to the byelection in Wentworth – an electorate where 12.5% of the population are Jewish, according to the 2016 Census. The byelection was ultimately won by Kerryn Phelps, who beat Liberal candidate Dave Sharma, who is not Jewish but was a former ambassador to Israel.
The government said the embassy proposal was flagged due to a vote on the UN general assembly resolution on the Palestinian Authority chairing the G77. But the byelection in Wentworth, once held by ousted PM Malcolm Turnbull, was also widely considered a factor.The government said the embassy proposal was flagged due to a vote on the UN general assembly resolution on the Palestinian Authority chairing the G77. But the byelection in Wentworth, once held by ousted PM Malcolm Turnbull, was also widely considered a factor.
Phelps said at the time the policy was nothing more than “a politically motivated move”.Phelps said at the time the policy was nothing more than “a politically motivated move”.
“To announce [the embassy move] without bipartisan discussion, without comprehensive analysis of the defence, security and trade implications, this should not have been raised in the context of the byelection,” she said. “There’s no question that this was a politically motivated decision”. “To announce [the embassy move] without bipartisan discussion, without comprehensive analysis of the defence, security and trade implications, this should not have been raised in the context of the byelection,” she said. “There’s no question that this was a politically motivated decision.”
On Saturday a spokeswoman for Jews against the Occupation Sydney, Vivienne Porzsolt, said Morrison’s move to recognise West Jerusalem as the capital without immediately moving the embassy was “a welcome backdown from an ill-considered proposal announced in the heat of a byelection”.
“It would have had disastrous consequences and rightly was condemned on all sides,” she told Guardian Australia.
“However, it would be much more relevant to immediately recognise Palestine which hopefully the national conference of the ALP this week will adopt as policy.
“The continuing alignment of Australia with the Israeli government and its extreme rightwing policies and the proposed build-up of mutual trade and ‘defence’ relationships is a serious barrier to a just peace and an end to the Israeli occupation with its continuing murders, dispossession and total denial of the rights of the Palestinians.”
Australian Associated Press contributed to this reportAustralian Associated Press contributed to this report
IsraelIsrael
Middle East and North AfricaMiddle East and North Africa
Scott MorrisonScott Morrison
CoalitionCoalition
Liberal partyLiberal party
Australian politicsAustralian politics
Australian GreensAustralian Greens
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