
by Emmitt Barry, Worthy News Washington D.C. Bureau Chief
(Worthy News) – Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced Monday that Australia will formally recognize a Palestinian state during the United Nations General Assembly in New York this September, aligning with recent moves by the United Kingdom, France, and Canada.
“Australia will recognize the right of the Palestinian people to a state of their own, predicated on the commitments Australia has received from the Palestinian Authority. We will work with the international community to make this right a reality,” Albanese said following a Cabinet meeting. He described the decision as part of a “coordinated global effort building momentum for a two-state solution.”
Albanese said Canberra’s position rests on commitments from Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas to enact governance reforms, end prisoner payments, alter school curricula, hold elections, and maintain recognition of Israel’s right to exist. He insisted Hamas would have no role in a future Palestinian state.
The Australian leader criticized Israel for settlement expansion, potential annexation of occupied territory, and ignoring international appeals to protect civilians and ensure humanitarian access in Gaza. He called the two-state framework “humanity’s best hope to break the cycle of violence in the Middle East and bring an end to the suffering and starvation in Gaza.”
Israeli Leaders Condemn Move
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu blasted the decision, accusing Australia and European governments of “rewarding terror” and ignoring the Palestinian leadership’s refusal to recognize Israel as a Jewish state.
“To have European countries and Australia march into that rabbit hole … is disappointing and I think it’s actually shameful,” Netanyahu said.
Israeli Ambassador to Australia Amir Maimon argued the move undermines hostage negotiations and emboldens extremists. “Peace is built by ending terror, not rewarding it. By recognizing a Palestinian state while Hamas continues to kill, kidnap, and reject peace, Australia undermines Israel’s security and hands a victory to those who oppose coexistence,” Maimon said.
President Isaac Herzog called the decision “a grave and dangerous mistake” and “a reward for terror” that would not aid Palestinians or return a single hostage.
Domestic and International Fallout
Australia’s Jewish community leaders condemned the shift as a break from decades of bipartisan policy linking Palestinian statehood to a negotiated peace agreement. The Executive Council of Australian Jewry said Canberra is recognizing “an entity with no agreed borders, no single government in effective control of its territory, and no demonstrated capacity to live in peace with its neighbors.”
The Zionist Federation of Australia warned that recognition without security guarantees or Palestinian reforms “will only undermine peace efforts and reward terrorism.”
Meanwhile, New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters said his country is considering similar recognition, calling it “a matter of when, not if.”
Hamas Reaction and U.S. Concerns
Senior Hamas official Ghazi Hamad told Al Jazeera that international recognition of Palestine is “one of the fruits of October 7,” referencing the terror group’s attack on Israel that killed around 1,200 people and resulted in 251 hostages.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio claimed that France’s recognition announcement helped derail ongoing hostage-for-ceasefire talks. “Hamas concluded, ‘let’s not do a ceasefire because we can be rewarded,'” Rubio said, warning that such moves make peace harder to achieve.
Australia is set to deliver its recognition statement during the UNGA’s annual general debate next month.
Prophetic Significance
While many call for peace through a two-state solution, prophecy teachers often highlight a sobering warning from the book of Joel: the nations are brought to judgment because they “divided” the land (Joel 3:2) — a land God explicitly gave to the descendants of Isaac and Jacob (Genesis 26:1-6; Genesis 28:13-14; Genesis 25:10-12; Psalms 105:8-11 ) For those attuned to biblical prophecy, how this pursuit of peace unfolds carries deep and potentially dramatic prophetic significance. This is further underscored by Jesus’ command to “learn the parable of the fig tree,” widely understood as a symbol of Israel. Just as the fig tree produces early fruit in the spring and ripens fully by the fall harvest, prophecy watchers see a pattern: Israel’s modern rebirth and eventual spiritual harvest align with God’s redemptive timeline. The budding of the fig tree signals that the season is near, calling us to be alert to the times.
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
Latest News from Worthy News
Christians appealed for prayers Tuesday after Typhoon Kalmaegi, locally known as Tino, left at least one person dead and forced tens of thousands to flee as it swept through the central Philippines, officials and aid workers said.
The federal government shutdown reached its 35th day on Monday, tying the longest in U.S. history as Senate leaders from both parties hinted that a resolution may finally be within reach, though significant divisions remain over health care funding.
The United Nations Security Council has begun formal preparations for a resolution that would establish an international stabilization force in Gaza, implementing key elements of U.S. President Donald Trump’s “20-Point Plan” for Middle East peace and Gaza’s long-term reconstruction.
In a few short months, the National Counterterrorism Center says it’s helped prevent 6,525 known or suspected terrorists (KSTs) from entering the U.S.
Former Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babiš, 71, announced Monday that he had formed a new governing coalition with right-wing and anti-Islam partners, triggering immediate controversy over his plan to appoint a foreign minister accused of racist and abusive behavior.
The aftermath of Spain’s worst flooding in recent memory became clearer Monday as Valencia’s regional president, Carlos Mazón, resigned after enduring months of political and public backlash over his handling of the 2024 floods that killed more than 200 people.
Tensions remained high in Serbia’s capital Monday after opponents and loyalists of President Aleksandar Vučić clashed in Belgrade during a rally marking one year since the Novi Sad train-station collapse that killed 16 people.