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27 February 2024 - The UK’s engagement with the Middle East and North Africa - Oral evidence

Committee Foreign Affairs Committee
Inquiry The UK’s engagement with the Middle East and North Africa

Tuesday 27 February 2024

Start times: 2:00pm (private) 2:30pm (public)


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Israel-Palestine: is a two-state solution still achievable? Experts to give evidence

On Tuesday 27 February, at 2.30pm, the Foreign Affairs Committee will hold an evidence session on the prospects for a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Meeting details

At 2:30pm: Oral evidence
Inquiry The UK’s engagement with the Middle East and North Africa
journalist and historian, author of The Accidental Empire: Israel and the Birth of the Settlements 1967-1977
Edward Said Professor of Modern Arab Studies at Columbia University
Managing Director at International Institute for Counter-Terrorism
At 3:45pm: Oral evidence
Inquiry The UK’s engagement with the Middle East and North Africa
former Minister of State for the Middle East at Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office
Co-Chairman at Israel/Palestine Center for Research and Information (IPCRI)
Founding Chairman at Jerusalem Development Fund

The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is one of the longest-running conflicts in the Middle East, and a major source of instability for the region.

In the first panel, witnesses will set out the historical context to the conflict. MPs may ask witnesses to explain the lessons of previous attempts to build a two-state solution, the impact of Israeli settlers in the West Bank, and whether solutions could extend beyond two states to one, three orĀ  four.

MPs may also ask witnesses to set out the common interests of Israelis and Palestinians and how these could form the basis of an eventual peaceful solution.

In the second panel, MPs may ask witnesses for their views on how the 7 October massacre and subsequent war in Gaza have affected the prospect of a two-state solution.

They may also ask whether a one-state solution is realistic, and how this could be held together without further conflict. MPs may ask which examples could be used as a model, and whether third party powers such as the UK, US, Turkey or Arab states could help resolve the conflict.

Location

The Grimond Room, Portcullis House

How to attend