- Ireland worries about UNRWA ban
- He did not speak to the media ahead of meeting Harris in the Irish capital
Ireland worries about UNRWA ban
Ireland's Prime Minister Simon Harris urged the EU to review trade ties with Israel Tuesday over Israeli lawmakers' "despicable" ban of the UN's Palestinian aid agency UNRWA.
The Irish leader criticized the Israeli parliament's "shameful" banning of the agency, which coordinates nearly all aid to Gaza.
The move has stirred a growing international backlash, including from Israel's ally the United States and European powers.
"The most important action that the European Union could take right now is reviewing trade relations," Harris told reporters in Dublin before meeting incoming European Council president Antonio Costa.
"What Israel and the Israeli Knesset did last night was despicable, disgraceful and shameful. More people will die, more children will starve," he said.
Harris added there was "no alternative" to UNRWA, and that he would discuss with Costa "how Europe now needs to find the moral courage... to act in relation to this.
"Ireland, Spain, Belgium, Slovenia, and others have been calling for more action at the EU level. I think that would be a very effective way and I'll continue to make that case," he said.
Costa replaces outgoing EU Council chief Charles Michel on December 1 and is touring European capitals prior to taking up the new post.
He did not speak to the media ahead of meeting Harris in the Irish capital
Ireland, along with Spain, Norway, and Slovenia, earlier this year formally recognized a Palestinian state comprising the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.
They have been among the most outspoken critics of Israel's conduct since the October 7, 2023, attack by Hamas which sparked the latest rounds of violence across the region.
In February, Dublin and Madrid asked the EU to "urgently" examine whether Israel was complying with its human rights obligations in Gaza under an accord linking them to trade ties.
They noted the "EU/Israel Association Agreement... makes respect for human rights and democratic principles an essential element of the relationship."
Based on AFP reports