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Ministers are being urged not to meet the Israeli president during an expected visit next week, as the government continues to condemn his country’s expanded military offensive in Gaza.

Isaac Herzog will be in Britain on Wednesday and Thursday, Sky News understands.

Downing Street has declined to comment, only saying it would set out any visits “in the normal way”.

Labour’s Sarah Champion is among the MPs to have voiced their opposition to any such plans, suggesting it will undermine the government’s condemnation of Israel’s actions in Gaza.

The Rotherham MP, who chairs the International Development Select Committee, said: “The UK has recognised the ‘real risk’ of genocide perpetuated by Israel, so unless this meeting is about peace, what message are we sending?”

Israel denies accusations it is committing genocide in Gaza, and British ministers have refused to use the term. They say it remains a matter for the International Court of Justice.

But Sir Keir Starmer has been increasingly critical of Israel’s operation, which has expanded significantly over the summer, with plans for the takeover of Gaza City.

The prime minister has said the UK will recognise a Palestinian state at a meeting of the UN’s general assembly this month, unless Israel meets several conditions it seems set to ignore.

They include taking substantive steps to end the “appalling situation in Gaza”, and agreeing to a ceasefire.

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Starmer reveals plan to recognise Palestine as state

‘Beyond disgusted’

Israel says his plan – which matches those of France and Canada, among others – constitutes a reward for Hamas, whose attack on 7 October 2023 triggered the current conflict.

Hamas militants killed 1,200 people in southern Israel, mainly civilians, and took 251 people hostage.

In the two years since, the Hamas-run health ministry says the number killed in Gaza has surpassed 64,000. Most of Gaza’s population has been displaced, with famine declared in Gaza City.

Other critics of Mr Herzog’s visit include former Labour shadow chancellor John McDonnell MP, who said it would “shame our country”.

Zarah Sultana MP – who quit Labour to co-lead a new party with Jeremy Corbyn, who is leading a tribunal into the government’s sale of arms to Israel – said she was “beyond disgusted” and called for Mr Herzog to be arrested.

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‘We are witnessing something horrific’

‘The only solution is through discussion’

Unlike Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, there is no international arrest warrant for Mr Herzog, whose role is largely ceremonial.

He is from a different political party to the PM, and has been critical over domestic issues, but has largely supported war efforts in Gaza.

Labour’s Emily Thornberry MP, chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee, told The Guardian “efforts should be made to engage” with the president.

While a strong critic of Israel, she told the newspaper “the only solution to this is through politics, through discussion”.

“Herzog is easier to talk to than many in the extreme right-wing government in Israel,” she added. “But we mustn’t pull our punches.”

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Crypto self-custody is a fundamental right, says SEC’s Hester Peirce

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Crypto self-custody is a fundamental right, says SEC's Hester Peirce

Hester Peirce, a commissioner of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and head of the SEC’s Crypto Task Force, reaffirmed the right to crypto self-custody and privacy in financial transactions.

“I’m a freedom maximalist,” Peirce told The Rollup podcast on Friday, while saying that self-custody of assets is a fundamental human right. She added:

“Why should I have to be forced to go through someone else to hold my assets? It baffles me that in this country, which is so premised on freedom, that would even be an issue — of course, people can hold their own assets.”

Privacy, SEC, Freedom, United States, Self Custody, Bitcoin Adoption, ETF
SEC commissioner Hester Peirce discusses the right to self-custody and financial privacy. Source: The Rollup

Peirce added that online financial privacy should be the standard. “It has become the presumption that if you want to keep your transactions private, you’re doing something wrong, but it should be exactly the opposite presumption,” she said.

The comments came as the Digital Asset Market Structure Clarity Act, a crypto market structure bill that includes provisions for self-custody, anti-money laundering(AML) regulations, and asset taxonomy, is delayed until 2026, according to Senator Tim Scott.

Related: SEC to hold privacy and financial surveillance roundtable in December

Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) challenge Bitcoin’s self-custody ethos

Many large Bitcoin (BTC) whales and long-term holders are pivoting from self-custody to ETFs to reap the tax benefits and hassle-free management of owning crypto in an investment vehicle.

“We are witnessing the first decline in self-custodied Bitcoin in 15 years,” Dr. Martin Hiesboeck, the head of research at crypto exchange Uphold, said.