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United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres speaks at a meeting on the UN World Conference Against Racism at the UN General Assembly in New York on Wednesday. Photo: AP

UN meeting on racism renews divides as US, Israel boycott

  • The meeting focused on reparations and justice for people of African heritage, and comes after George Floyd’s death highlighted racial inequality
  • But at least 19 countries skipped it because of continued grievances over a draft resolution about Palestinians at a conference in Durban 20 years ago
The United Nations General Assembly pledged on Wednesday to redouble efforts to combat racism around the world, commemorating a landmark but contentious 2001 anti-racism conference by holding an anniversary meeting once again riven with divisions.

Looking back on the two decades since the conference in Durban, South Africa, the assembly adopted a resolution that acknowledged some progress but deplored what it called a rise in discrimination, violence and intolerance directed at people of African heritage and many other groups – from the Roma to refugees, the young to the old, people with disabilities to people who have been displaced.

At a meeting focused on reparations and racial justice for people with African heritage, the assembly pointed to the effects of slavery, colonialism and genocide and called for ensuring that people of African descent can seek “adequate reparation or satisfaction” through national institutions.

“Millions of the descendants of Africans who were sold into slavery remain trapped in lives of underdevelopment, disadvantage, discrimination and poverty,” South African President Cyril Ramaphosa told the gathering via video.

He urged the UN to take up the question of reparations for “one of the darkest periods in the history of humankind and a crime of unparalleled barbarity”.

South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa delivers a video address to a UN meeting to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the adoption of the Durban Declaration. Photo: Reuters

President Felix Tshisekedi of the Democratic Republic of the Congo said reparations, however they might be provided, should reflect not only historic wrongs but also “the scars of racial inequality, subordination and discrimination, which were built under slavery, apartheid and colonialism”.

The assembly’s resolution also noted ills caused by religious prejudices, specifically including anti-Muslim, anti-Semitic and anti-Christian bias.

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But Israel, the United States and some other countries boycotted the meeting because of continued grievances about the Durban meeting 20 years ago. There, the US and Israel pulled out because participants drafted a conference declaration that denounced Israel’s treatment of Palestinians.

And Jamaica, while joining Wednesday’s meeting, said there were not sufficient calls for slavery reparations in a new political declaration that was being drafted.

Still, the event – coinciding with the assembly’s annual meeting of world leaders – spotlighted the cause of racial equality at a time when the coronavirus pandemic has underscored inequities, and as the 2020 police killing of George Floyd in the US has re-energised racial justice movements around the world.

DRC President Felix Tshisekedi speaks at a UN meeting on racism. Photo: AP

The disparity in vaccine availability around the world “clearly does not demonstrate equality between the countries and peoples of this world”, Tshisekedi said. Only about 1 in 1,000 people in his country have received at least one shot.

He and others praised some developments since the 2001 conference, including some national-level legislative efforts and the assembly’s new Permanent Forum of People of African Descent, meant to promote their rights and inclusion.

But “we, as a global community, have not done enough to tackle the pervasiveness of racism, racial discrimination, intolerance and xenophobia”, said assembly president Abdulla Shahid, who is from the Maldives.

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The 2001 Durban conference aimed to usher in “a century of human rights”, one that would see “the eradication of racism … and the realisation of genuine equality of opportunity and treatment for all individuals and peoples”, according to its declaration.

But work on the document was rocked by tensions over how to address the legacy of slavery, complaints from multiple groups who felt their cause was getting short shift, and a clash over Israel.

With Arab states keen to condemn the Jewish state over its conduct toward Palestinians, the draft declaration decried “racist practices of Zionism” and accused Israel of “practices of racial discrimination”.″

After the American and Israeli walkout, the wording was changed to recognise the “plight” of the Palestinians, and the document was eventually adopted.

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The US still faults “the anti-Israel and anti-Semitic underpinnings of the Durban process and has long-standing freedom of expression concerns” with the results, UN Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield said in a statement on Wednesday explaining her country’s decision not to participate in the anniversary meeting.

Thomas-Greenfield, who is African American, said combating racism is a top priority for her and for the Biden administration. She said the US would continue working on the issue in “more inclusive” settings, without detailing what she meant.

Israeli Ambassador Gilad Erdan lambasted “the radical anti-Semitism” of the Durban conference in remarks at a competing, virtual meeting organised by a professor at Touro College in New York.

At least 19 nations skipped the assembly’s event on Wednesday, by Israel’s count.

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