The Peace Summit for Gaza and the “Palestinian question” that has brought together a total of 34 countries and international organizations in Egypt has concluded without a final statement joint of these.

Egypt has appreciated the effort to seek consensus above political or religious positions to address this crisis and the situation in Israel and Palestine. However, the participants have made two requests: the hostage release without conditions and the humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza.

With a handshake The acting President of the Spanish Government has greeted each other, Pedro Sanchezand the president of the Palestinian National Authority, Mahmoud Abbas. The meeting ended with a clear message: support and solidarity with Gaza, a population that will receive more humanitarian aid from Spain, Sánchez announced.

Shortly before, the Spanish president was clear in the main plenary session. It is essential protect life of all civilians, “those who are prisoners and must return to their families and those who are suffering the horror in Gaza“.

He has demanded a humanitarian ceasefire short term. Likewise, he has expressed another long-term request: a solution, the creation of two independent states. “We must work to build two states, Israel and Palestinewith mutual respect to guarantee peace between both countries,” he stressed.

About thirty countries and organizations international organizations have met in Cairo to address the conflict between Israel and Palestine, although without Israeli representation in Egypt. During the Summit, the Palestinian leader – present in the chamber – warned: “We are not going to leave.”

Abbas has stressed that they are not going to abandon their territory no matter how tough the challenges are. neighboring countries, Egypt and Jordan, ask the international community not to look the other way. The Egyptian president Abdel Fattah El Sisi has been forceful: “Egypt condemns the attacks on all civilians and expresses his astonishment because the world stays out of it.”

“The deeper and crueler the crisis, the less the world seems to care,” lamented Jordan’s King, Abdullah II. In short, a long-awaited and new first step towards peace that was, once again, up in the air on Saturday at the end of the Summit has ended without a final statement joint.