In 2006, a number of Chilean politicians including Deputies
Iván Paredes and
Sergio Aguiló "strongly condemned the Israeli aggression against the
Palestinian people in the
Gaza Strip and the
West Bank and urged the Chilean government to recall their ambassador to Tel Aviv until the aggressions are brought to an end". The leader of the socialist bloc in the Chilean parliament,
Alejandro Navarro, said, "Latin America must react as one single voice against what is going on in the
occupied Palestinian territories". Mr. Navarro also reported that they are going to "organize a delegation of Chilean lawmakers to act as international observers in the occupied Palestinian territory and to express solidarity with the Palestinian people." A member of the Chilean communist party, Hugo Gutierrez, described Israel as a "terrorist state" and demanded the United Nations to "act on behalf of the international law to stop the massacres and to achieve Palestinian sovereignty over their land". In January 2011, the Chilean government adopted a resolution "recognising the existence of the
State of Palestine as a free, independent and sovereign state". A senior Israeli official responded saying "It is a useless and empty gesture because it will not change anything. The Chilean announcement, like those preceding it in Latin America, will not encourage the Palestinians to negotiate."
President of Chile,
Sebastián Piñera, said "In this way we contribute to that end that may exist in the Middle East, a Palestinian state and a state of Israel that can live in peace and prosperity and recognized frontiers with secure borders". In response,
Gabriel Zaliasnik, president of the Jewish community in Chile, thought Israel's Foreign Ministry made a mistake. Zaliasnik believed the statement that eventually emerged from the Chilean Government accepting Palestinian independence while acknowledging Israel's right to security was "not the diplomatic debacle some made it out to be, but in fact was a victory of sorts". In July 2014, the government of
Michelle Bachelet summoned its ambassador in Israel during the
Gaza conflict saying Israeli operation "breach fundamental norms in international humanitarian law". In 2018 the Chilean commune of
Valdivia declared itself "Free of Israeli Apartheid" (). According to the mayor of Valdivia
Omar Sabat this mean the municipality would "restrain from purchasing any services from companies related to the Israeli apartheid". The municipal decree was declared
unconstitutional by the
Comptroller General of Chile in December 2018. Subsequently, the Chilean Foreign Ministry issued an apology to the Israeli ambassador, which was accepted by the latter. Israel reprimanded Chile's "bizarre and unprecedented behavior." In protest of the
Gaza war, Chile recalled its ambassador from Israel. ==See also==