Brazil has assumed the presidency of a United Nations working group focused on advancing Palestinian statehood recognition.The announcement was made by the Brazilian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The country accepted this leadership role following a formal invitation from France and Saudi Arabia.The working group, officially named Group on Promoting Respect for International Law for the Implementation of the Two-State Solution, aims to coordinate international efforts toward Palestinian recognition.Brazilian Ambassador Srgio Danese will spearhead discussions among European, Arab, and Latin American nations participating in the initiative.
France and Saudi Arabia plan to host an international conference in July 2025 specifically addressing Palestinian recognition.The timing reflects growing urgency as continued conflict in Gaza threatens to make a viable Palestinian state increasingly difficult to establish.
Participants hope to accelerate recognition before further destruction or political obstacles emerge.Diplomatic Push: Brazil Leads Global Effort for Palestinian State.
(Photo Internet reproduction)The United States remains the primary roadblock to Palestinian statehood at the UN level.
As a permanent Security Council member with veto power, the U.S.
effectively prevents Palestine from gaining full UN membership despite widespread international support.Currently, 147 of 193 UN member states recognize Palestine as sovereign.
Ambassador Danese emphasized the groups practical focus.
We aim to identify concrete actions countries can take to ensure the two-state solution becomes reality, he stated.Brazil Leads Diplomatic Push for Palestinian RecognitionThe Brazilian diplomat has already contacted participating governments requesting active engagement in upcoming discussions.
Brazil brings significant diplomatic weight to this role.The country officially recognized Palestine within 1967 borders in 2010 and has consistently supported Palestinian rights in international forums.
This position represents a continuation of Brazils foreign policy under President Lula da Silva, who has called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza.The working group has established a tight timeline with government submissions due by May 22, followed by draft documents and meetings throughout early June.Brazil and Senegal will jointly prepare the final document for the conference co-chairs by June 10.
This leadership role places Brazil at the center of one of diplomacys most challenging issues.The group hopes international pressure will highlight the growing isolation of the U.S.
and Israel on Palestinian recognition while advancing concrete steps toward implementing the long-sought two-state solution.
Music
Trailers
DailyVideos
India
Pakistan
Afghanistan
Bangladesh
Srilanka
Nepal
Thailand
StockMarket
Business
Technology
Startup
Trending Videos
Coupons
Football
Search
Download App in Playstore
Download App
Best Collections