Israel-Gaza war: Two states policy key to peace in Palestine – Bolaji Akinyemi

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Israel-Gaza war: Two states policy key to peace in Palestine – Bolaji Akinyemi image

A former Minister of External Affairs and Professor of Political Science, Bolaji Akinyemi said the 1948 United Nations Resolution on the states policy is key to a lasting peace to the long conflict between Palestine and Israel.
Akinyemi stated this in an interview on Channels Television’s Sunday Politics.
He also said Nigeria should not take sides in the ongoing war between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist militant group Hamas.
“We should not take sides and we don’t need to take sides,” he said.
According to Prof Akinyemi, a former Minister of External Affairs, the call for peace in the Middle East by the Federal Government of Nigeria is the best position to take.
Speaking on Sunday, Prof Akinyemi, also a former Director General of the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs (NIIA), said Nigeria should be neutral.


He said, “We should be neutral. I congratulate President Tinubu for the position he’s taken. We should be for peace, we should be calling for a ceasefire, and we should be calling for humanitarian corridors that allow water, medicine, and food to be going in."
“We should also be suggesting the way forward, ultimate way forward: 1948 United Nations Resolution creating two states – the Palestinian State and an Israeli State; those are the things that are key to a resolution of the conflict in that place."
“We should not take sides and we don’t need to take sides. And in any case, the problem in that place is so complex. There are no good guys and there are no bad guys. So, there is no need for us to be righteous in our position.”
The don said there are religious implications to the war even though it is not a religious issue, adding that Nigerian leaders looking at the issue from a religious perspective are wrong because “there are more Christians among the Palestinians”.
Akinyemi said urban terrorism is likely if the war is not brought under quick control as there are terrorists on both sides who are dominant in all cities of the world.
He noted that the war is already having an economic impact around the world and Nigeria won’t be spared from the ripple effect.
According to him, the price of crude will continue to go up as long as the war continues and Nigeria will pay higher prices for petroleum products and lesser prices for crude and this will hurt Nigeria’s economy.

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