Italy has yet to recognize Palestine as a sovereign state, partly due to a desire to await the outcome of the currently stalled negotiations, and partly because the majority of European Union countries do not recognize it either. Nevertheless, Italy firmly backs the creation of the State of Palestine in accordance with the two-state solution. It also helps to fund UNRWA, which assists Palestinian refugees. Both nations are a part of the Union for the Mediterranean.[1]
History
The first contact between Italy and the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) began in the 1960s. The Italian government was one of the first Western governments to establish relations with the PLO. Since then, Italy has been a strong supporter of the Palestinian people and their right to self-determination.[2] The relations between Italy and Palestine are based on economic, tourism, security, and education cooperation. For instance, Italy provides development assistance to the Palestinian Authority in order to help it build infrastructure and create jobs. In addition, Italy is a major tourist destination for Palestinians, and the two countries have worked together to improve security in the region. Finally, Italy has also provided scholarships for Palestinian students to study in Italian universities.[3]
In 2013, Italian Prime MinisterEnrico Letta visited the Palestinian territories as part of a larger tour of the Middle East; Letta's visit was seen by analysts as an effort to promote peace in the region and to strengthen ties between Italy and the Palestinians.[4] However, others noted how the Letta cabinet also kept making efforts to consolidate relations with Israel, while maintaining a cautious approach in various debates regarding the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, in line with previous cabinets.[5]
On 27 February 2015, a non-binding motion supporting the recognition of a Palestinian State as soon as the latter democratized, presented by Prime Minister Matteo Renzi and the Democratic Party, was passed by the Chamber of Deputies of the Italian Parliament, with 300 votes in favor and 45 against.[6][7] At the same time, the Chamber of Deputies approved another motion, presented by New Centre-Right and other parties, with 237 votes in favor and 84 against;[7] it called for a "timely return to direct negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians",[6] in order to fulfill the Oslo Agreement, and subordinated the recognition of Palestine as a state to "a political agreement between Al-Fatah and Hamas [...] through the recognition of the State Of Israel and the abandonment of violence".[7] A third motion explicitly calling for the full and formal recognition of the Palestinian State, presented by Left Ecology Freedom[6] and the Five Star Movement,[7] was rejected by the same house, with 56 votes in favor and 317 against.[7]
As of 2022, Italy donated a total amount of €14 million to the UNRWA, a UN agency that supports Palestinian refugees, seven million of which were invested in the program's main services.[8] In June 2023, the Italian government supported the UNRWA with an additional €1 million-worth donation.[9] However, following the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel on 7 October of the same year, the Italian government suspended its funding to the UNRWA; the decision was kept undisclosed until 27 January 2024, when Minister of Foreign AffairsAntonio Tajani publicly confirmed it,[10] after several other EU and international countries also decided to temporarily stop their funding over a series of allegations made by Israel against the agency, including that a number of its Gaza Strip staff had been involved in the Hamas-led attack.[10][11] On 25 May 2024, following a meeting between Tajani and Palestinian Prime MinisterMohammad Mustafa at the Palazzo della Farnesina in Rome, the former announced that Italy would restore its financial support to the UNRWA in a press statement,[8][12] albeit under the condition that "not even a penny risks ending up supporting terrorism".[13][14] According to Tajani, the Italian government approved a €35 million recovery package for the Palestinian population, five of which would be allocated to the UNRWA,[8][12] with the remaining €30 million being assigned to the Food for Gaza initiative,[13][14] in collaboration with the FAO, the PAM and the Red Crescent.[14]
On 27 October 2023, Italy abstained from voting on an UN General Assembly resolution calling for an immediate ceasefire in the Israel–Hamas war,[15] before taking the same stance on a similar resolution on 12 December of the same year.[16][17] However, on 25 January 2024, the Democratic Party and its secretary, Elly Schlein, presented a non-binding motion urging the government to "sustain every initiative aimed to call for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire" in the war;[18][19] following the addition of several amendments and two phone calls between Schlein and Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni,[18] the resolution was approved by the Chamber of Deputies,[18][20][21] with MPs from the right-wing parties supporting the Meloni cabinet abstaining from voting.[18]