Brazilian Foreign Minister Mauro Vieira spoke today of G20 members’ almost unanimous support for the two-state solution to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

“He didn’t just say ‘unanimity’ because all the interventions did not focus on the issue, but those who showed up, spoke in favor and there are many,” a Brazilian diplomatic source explained to AFP.

During a short speech before journalists, at the end of the meeting of the foreign ministers of the G20 countries – the Group of the 20 largest and fastest growing economies on the planet – the Brazilian Foreign Minister underlined the almost unanimous support of the two-state solution as ” the only possible one for the conflict between Israel and Palestine”.

Brazil has held the rotating presidency of the G20 since December, and the Rio de Janeiro meeting focused heavily on the wars in Gaza and Ukraine.

In relation to the conflict in the Gaza Strip, “there is a common denominator, which is that there will be no peace, no sustainable security for Israel, as long as the Palestinians do not have a clear prospect of a state of their own,” the head of the European Union said today. diplomat Josep Borel to the journalists.

“There is a strong call for a two-state solution from the whole world here, I haven’t heard anyone say otherwise,” he said.

“I am pleased to hear that all the members of the G20 and almost all the people who spoke today (Wednesday), said they want a two-state solution,” he said on the first day of the meeting.

The head of Norwegian diplomacy Espen Barth Ide has the same opinion: “I am pleased to hear that all the members of the G20 and almost all the people who spoke today (Wednesday) said they want a two-state solution,” he said on the first day of the meeting.

“However, saying we want a two-state solution is one thing, and figuring out how to get there is another,” he stressed.

On Wednesday, Israel’s parliament overwhelmingly passed a resolution proposed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that opposes any “unilateral recognition of a Palestinian state,” which would amount to rewarding, according to the text, the unprecedented terror attack it launched Hamas on October 7.