The draft declarations coming out of the racism conference mentions no country other than Israel, and alludes to no others but Serbia (once). There are a number of references to Palestine, but nothing beyond generalities for everything else (i.e., statements against racism pertaining to Asians, Africans, and denunciation of anti-semitism and anti-Roma feeling by nobody in particular. This includes an exceedingly murky discussion of slavery in the Western Hemisphere.
In this particular respect, if not others, the statement of the Jewish caucus is very much on target. The only pointed references to racist policy by states are to Israel. I'm not against any such references, but in a document purporting to reflect a world view of racism, such narrowness confirms the conference as a total farce. Not least important, it will do nothing for the Palestinian cause. A more even-handed and wide-ranging survey would put anti-Arab/Muslim/Palestinian policy by Israel and others in a harsher light, in my view.
There's a good piece by Earl Ofari Hutchinson in Salon along similar lines.
mbs
I doubt that Israel will get much sympathies (outside the USA) for being "picked on." No one likes the teacher's pet, you see. :->
As Bob Herbert wrote in the New York Times, "If absolutely everything had gone well at the heroically named conference -- which is still under way in Durban, on the east coast of South Africa -- all that could have emerged would be a paper telling us that racism, anti-Semitism and other forms of intolerance are bad. In its essence, the paper's theme would be, 'Now, now, you stop that'" (6 September 2001)! Conferences of this kind are by nature farcical. The only difference this time is that the USA and Israel were made to walk out in a huff, unable to play the roles of anti-racist leaders of the free world, which made the conference a far more politically provocative spectacle than otherwise.
Yoshie
- Japan, Ian Murray Fri 07 Sep 2001, 03:04 GMT
- Corporate Welfare Information Center, Michael Pugliese Fri 07 Sep 2001, 01:15 GMT
- Not Just Isreal..., Michael Pugliese Fri 07 Sep 2001, 00:13 GMT
- <Possible follow-up(s)>
- RE: Not Just Isreal..., Max Sawicky Fri 07 Sep 2001, 00:55 GMT
- Re: Not Just Isreal..., Yoshie Furuhashi Fri 07 Sep 2001, 06:23 GMT
- RE: Re: Not Just Isreal..., Max Sawicky Fri 07 Sep 2001, 12:57 GMT
- Re: Not Just Isreal..., Jim Devine Fri 07 Sep 2001, 15:16 GMT
- India's banks, Ian Murray Fri 07 Sep 2001, 00:09 GMT
- "Rank Opportunism, " from the Iraqi Communist Party, Michael Pugliese Thu 06 Sep 2001, 23:23 GMT