EU foreign ministers gathered on Tuesday for their first meeting since the bloc’s top diplomat, Kaja Kallas, presented a list last week of ten potential measures championed by Spain, Ireland and Slovenia against Israel over its continued offensive in Gaza. But in the wake of Israel's recent agreement to ramp up humanitarian aid deliveries into region, a majority of countries abandoned the idea. Countries like the Netherlands that pushed Kallas to go further and review the EU-Israel association agreement gave up pushing further. More Irish-Israeli action Irish Fianna Fáil MEPs held a forty-minute meeting with Ursula von der Leyen, her chief of staff Björn Seibert and other cabinet members on the top floor of the Berlaymont yesterday, seeking to pressure her to end the EU-Israel Association Agreement or, failing that, restrict trade with Israel. Irish-Israeli relations have deteriorated severely since the beginning of the war, with Israel shuttering its embassy in Dublin last year citing the country's “extreme anti‑Israel policies". The Renew Europe four said they had nothing personally against von der Leyen, but abhorred the Commission's position on Gaza, where they claim Israel has breached international law following the deadliest attack on Jews since the Holocaust. Von der Leyen listened as they told her that her public statements should make more references to international law and the so-called two-state solution. The MEPs secured the meeting ahead of the motion of censure against the Commission last week, where they were threatening not to vote it down. In the end three of the MEPs Billy Kelleher, Barry Cowen, Cynthia Ní Mhurchú voted against the motion, while Barry Andrews abstained. At a Tony Blair Institute event in Brussels last night, Ireland’s EU Commissioner Michael McGrath also weighed in on the subject. "Gaza needs to be flooded with aid as quickly as possible,” he told the crowd. “The situation is just existential for two million people.” Keffiyeh kerfuffle A meeting of the Parliament’s foreign affairs committee on Israel-Palestine turned into a political flashpoint when two EPP MEPs took aim at a parliament official who was wearing a keffiyeh, the Palestinian headscarf popularised in the 1970s by Yasser Arafat, the deceased leader of the Palestinian Liberation Organisation. Spanish EPP lawmaker Antonio López-Istúriz White fumed: “Civil servants are not here to make ideology,” his EPP colleague Andrey Kovatchev, from Bulgaria, concurred. That lit a fire under far-left lawmaker Marc Botenga, who shot back: “I do not see the issue at all [...] I think that person is dressed completely normally.” He argued that the EPP never complained about Ukrainian symbols. Sebastian Tynkkynen, a hard-right Finnish MEP, jumped in accusing a translator present of wearing similar “gear”. Tynkkynen was reportedly seen photographing the staffers, prompting outrage. Spanish Socialist Hana Jalloul, chairing the meeting, attempted to calm things down: “We don’t have authority on that.” One of the two parliamentary staffers in question was seen escorted out of the meeting room, whilst MEPs and their assistants went to don their keffiyehs for the rest of the hearing.
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