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War between Israel and Hamas: Emmanuel Macron will meet with the Egyptian President in Cairo this Wednesday

Emmanuel Macron continues his diplomatic tour of the Middle East in the hope of finding a solution to the conflict between Israel and Hamas. After Tel Aviv on Tuesday, where he spoke with Israeli leaders, and the West Bank, where he visited Mahmoud Abbas, head of the Palestinian Authority, the French President is in Jordan this Wednesday morning. He must speak with King Abdullah in Amman. Emmanuel Macron is then due to travel to Egypt to meet the Egyptian President in Cairo, the Elysee Palace said.

The French head of state hopes through this tense two-day trip to prevent a military escalation following the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7 and the Israeli response in the Gaza Strip, which has already resulted in thousands of casualties on both sides. In Israel, Emmanuel Macron expressed his condolences to “a friendly country grieving in the face of the worst terrorist attack in its history.” Facing the risk of a flare-up, he also urged Iran, a powerful Hamas backer, and its regional allies, Lebanon’s Hezbollah and the Houthis in Yemen, “not to risk opening new fronts.”

Emmanuel Macron also recalled his desire to resume the “peace process” of creating a Palestinian state. Thus, the head of state wants to appeal to the Arab countries of the region. He therefore met with Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi on Wednesday afternoon in Cairo after meeting King Abdullah II of Jordan this morning. In the occupied West Bank on Tuesday, he wanted to show his support for the Palestinian people by visiting Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas.

Macron advocates ‘two-state solution’

“A Palestinian life is worth an Israeli life,” he insisted, calling on Israel to evaluate its response. “I see, I hear the suffering of the civilian population in Gaza,” he added, as Gazans became trapped in Israeli bombing attacks targeting Hamas. Emmanuel Macron, himself under attack by Islamists in France, has therefore made sure to demonstrate a balanced policy in the region, with ambitions to play his part in trying to overcome the earthquake caused by the attack on Hamas.

Thus, he wants to revive the “two-state solution,” Palestinian and Israeli, which appears to have become obsolete in recent years amid the gradual normalization of relations between Israel and neighboring Arab countries. Even if “it is difficult now to talk about resuming the peace process,” he admitted, “it is more necessary than ever.” And he insisted: “There can be no lasting peace unless there is recognition of the legitimate right of the Palestinian people to have a state. »

Emmanuel Macron also intends to test his proposal for an international “coalition” to “fight” the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas in the countries of the region. According to his circle, we may be talking about creating a new coalition or expanding the fight against Hamas to the one that has existed since 2014, to fight the Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq, which includes Paris, but also Arab countries. participate. . However, many Arab countries do not share the Western position regarding Hamas.

Source: Le Parisien

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