

The petition was launched earlier this month by British
citizen Damian Moran and is posted on the government's website.

If the number of signatories reaches 100,000, the petition
can be considered for debate in Britain's parliament.

The British government was obliged to respond after the
document received 10,000 signatories, saying that "visiting heads of
foreign governments, such as prime minister Netanyahu, have immunity
from legal
process, and cannot be arrested or detained".

"As the prime minister (David Cameron) said, we were
all deeply saddened by the violence and the UK has been at the forefront of
international reconstruction efforts.

Britain is pushing for a two-state solution to resolve the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and "will reinforce this message to Mr
Netanyahu during his visit" in September, according to the response.
- Any British citizen can launch a petition on the government's website, asking for a specific action from the government or parliament's lower House of Commons.
- Only British citizens are meant to sign the petitions, but need only enter a name, email address and valid postcode.
- Israel launched military action in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip on July 8 last year, leading to the deaths of more than 2,000 Palestinians and 66 Israeli soldiers.

Israel's embassy in London called the latest petition a
"meaningless publicity stunt".
Source: Reuters
Post a Comment