Even if such a legislative resolution from the government parties comes quickly, Belgian Foreign Minister Didier Reynders said today he first will push for a new EU initiative to bring Israel and the Palestinian authorities back to the negotiating table to reinvigorate the peace process.
Belgian legislators are completing work on a text and it was expected that a resolution would be tabled quickly, said Peter Luykx, a legislator for the N-VA party, the biggest in the four-party coalition.
He insisted that the resolution wouldn't show unconditional support for Palestinian statehood, but that "quite a few conditions and strings are attached."
Reynders told VRT network that in the end, "it will be up to the government to decide when it is suitable to move toward recognition."
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Yesterday, France's lower house voted to urge the government to recognise a Palestinian state. On October 30, Sweden became the first Western European nation to recognise Palestinian statehood.
Germany, Israel's closest European ally and the EU's most powerful member, is a leading opponent of recognising Palestinian statehood before Israel does. Berlin is seeking ways to kick-start the peace process again.