Canada announced on Wednesday that it is prepared to recognise Palestine as a state on the condition that the Palestinian Authority undertakes key political reforms, including holding long-delayed elections. Prime Minister Mark Carney said he had received assurances from Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas during a recent phone call that such reforms would be enacted. Carney added that Canada plans to formally recognise Palestine during the United Nations General Assembly in September, after 15 countries co-signed a declaration that pointed towards a wave of future recognitions of an independent Palestinian state. The signatories include Andorra, Australia, Canada, Finland, Luxembourg, New Zealand, Portugal and San Marino, each of which has not yet recognised an independent Palestinian state. They also include Iceland, Ireland, Malta, Norway, Slovenia and Spain, which have. “The deepening suffering of civilians leaves no room for delaying coordinated international action to support peace, security and the dignity of human life,” Carney said following a cabinet meeting focused largely on the crisis in Gaza. But, these three are not the only, the list of countries recognising Palestine as a state is a long one. Here are the 10 big points to know: