Brazil withdraws ambassador to Israel after months of tension over Gaza offensive
UNB
Publish: 30 May 2024, 04:18 PM
RIO DE JANEIRO, May 30 (AP/UNB) - Brazil withdrew its ambassador to Israel on Wednesday after months of tensions between the two countries over the war in Gaza, the latest repercussion from a South American nation over Israel's military campaign in the Palestinian territory.
The move was announced
in Brazil's official gazette.
Israel's foreign
ministry said no official message has yet been received from the Brazilian
government on the matter. However, following the media reports, the Brazilian
charge d'affaires was summoned to appear at the ministry on Thursday for a
meeting.
Brazil's President Luiz
Inacio Lula da Silva has been a frequent critic of Israel's offensive in Gaza,
which he compared to the Holocaust earlier this year. That led Israel's Foreign
Minister Israel Katz to summon the Brazilian ambassador, Frederico Meyer, to
the national Holocaust museum in Jerusalem for a public reprimand.
At the time, Lula called
Meyer home. However, Wednesday's action represented an escalation and a
diplomatic downgrade, with the Brazilian Embassy in Israel still in place but
without an ambassador in the post.
According to an official
at Brazil's foreign ministry, Wednesday's removal comes in response to Meyer's
humiliation by Israel's top diplomat. The official, who has knowledge of the
situation, spoke on condition of anonymity as he wasn't authorized to speak
publicly.
"Any appointment of
a new Brazilian ambassador to Israel will be announced in due course in a press
release. For the time being, the Brazilian Embassy in Tel Aviv continues to
function under the leadership of the charge d'affaires," Brazil's foreign
ministry said.
Meyer has been
transferred to Geneva and will join Brazil's permanent mission to the United
Nations and other international organizations.
A pro-Israel group in
the country, the Israeli Confederation of Brazil, said on social media that it
"regretted" the move. "The Brazilian
government's unilateral measure moves us away from the Brazilian diplomatic
tradition of balance and seeking dialogue and prevents Brazil from exercising
its desired role as mediator and protagonist in the Middle East," it said.
The war in Gaza, now in
its eighth month, began when the Palestinian militant Hamas group burst into
southern Israel in a surprise attack on Oct. 7, killing some 1,200 civilians
and taking around 250 hostage.
Israel's offensive in
response to that attack has killed at least 36,096 Palestinians, according to
Gaza's Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between fighters and
civilians in its count. Israel says it has killed 15,000 militants.
In February, Brazil's
Lula said that "what is happening in the Gaza Strip and to the Palestinian
people hasn't been seen in any other moment in history. Actually, it did when
Hitler decided to kill the Jews."
Danielle Ayres, an
international relations professor at the Federal University of Santa Catarina
in southern Brazil, said Wednesday's action was "symbolic" and that
by stopping short of severing diplomatic ties, Lula indicated he wants to
maintain relations while strengthening the Brazilian government's position of
"vehemently criticizing the way Israel is responding" to the Oct. 7
attack.
Separately, Brazil's
foreign ministry welcomed this week's formal recognition of a Palestinian state
by Ireland, Norway and Spain. Brazil recognized a Palestinian state in 2010.
Tuesday's coordinated effort by the three Western European nations added to
international pressure on Israel, which condemned the diplomatic move.
"By urging all
other countries that have not yet done so to recognize Palestine as a sovereign
state, Brazil reaffirms its defense of the two-state solution, with an
independent and viable state of Palestine living side by side with Israel, in
peace and security," the ministry said in a statement.
Israel says its war in
Gaza is a defensive action triggered by Hamas' unprecedented assault and
rejects any comparisons of its offensive to the Holocaust.
Earlier this month,
Colombia broke diplomatic relations with Israel. Colombia's President Gustavo
Petro had previously suspended purchases of weapons from Israel and had also
compared Israel's actions in Gaza to those of Nazi Germany.
Also in the region,
Bolivia and Belize have also severed diplomatic relations with Israel over the
Israel-Hamas war.
END/UNB/AP/PR
