UN Draft: Zionism "a Movement Based On Racial Superiority"
By Janine ZachariaThe Jerusalem Post, July 4, 2001
WASHINGTON (July 4) - Despite the threat of an
American boycott, the latest draft of a declaration up for adoption
at a UN conference on racism next month includes references to
Israel's treatment of the Palestinians as a "crime against humanity"
and revives the classification of Zionism as a "movement which is
based on racial superiority."
A copy of the latest version of the text - which also refers to
Arabs who suffered as a result of the 1948 Arab-Israeli war as
victims of "ethnic cleansing" - was obtained yesterday by The
Jerusalem Post. The document is slated for final approval by the
conference's preparatory committee when it convenes in Geneva on
July 30 for the last time ahead of the late August "World Conference
against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia, and Related
Intolerance" to be held in the South African port city of Durban.
Following are clauses that relate to Israel and Zionism:
Clause 25, listed in a section entitled "Ethnic cleansing, genocide,
slavery, and similar crimes," reads:
"We affirm that a foreign occupation founded on settlements, its
laws based on racial discrimination, with the aim of continuing
domination on the occupied territory, as well as its practices,
which consist of reinforcing a total military blockade, isolating
towns, cities, and villages under occupation from each other,
totally contradict the purposes and principles of the Charter of the
United Nations and constitute a serious violation of international
human rights and humanitarian law, a new kind of apartheid, a crime
against humanity and a serious threat to international peace and
security."
Clause 29, in a section entitled "Victims of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia, and related intolerance," begins: "We
salute and acknowledge the memory of all victims of racism, and
racial discrimination, xenophobia, and related intolerance, slavery,
and slave trade, colonialism.
Items where there is still disagreement among delegates refer both
to the Holocaust and to "ethnic cleansing of the Arab population in
historic Palestine."
There are also references to "racial discrimination against the
Palestinians as well as other inhabitants of the Arab occupied
territories" and a call for the cessation of such practices.
Clause 54 speaks of the need to combat anti-Semitism and
Islamophobia as intrinsic to opposing all forms of racism, while the
draft of Clause 55, on which there are also conflicting opinions,
reflects deep concern at the worldwide increase in anti-Semitism and
"the increase of racist practices of Zionism... as well as the
emergence of racial and violent movements based on racism and
discriminatory ideas, in particular, the Zionist movement, which is
based on racial superiority."
Israeli and American diplomats, as well as Jewish groups such the
Anti-Defamation League, have been lobbying delegates to the
conference to try to make sure the resolution does not include the
clauses hostile to Israel.
Deputy Foreign Minister Michael Melchior, who will be representing
Israel at the event and who is spearheading Israel's fight against
the anti-Semitic and anti-Zionist proposals, convened a conference
in London yesterday of some 60 Jewish leaders from around the world
to discuss the proposals and how best to lobby against them.
The proposals, said Melchior, undermine the legitimacy of the State
of Israel and even the existence of Judaism. By using words like
genocide in relation to settlements, and by criticizing the Law of
Return as an absolute evil, the proposals cheapen what is truly
evil," he added.
"If to build an apartment in Gilo is genocide, if the Law of Return
is racism and apartheid, the expressions of absolute evil are
watered down. If all is genocide, then nothing is genocide,"
Melchior said.
In addition to delegitimizing Israel and Zionism, Melchior said,
"the proposals also attempt to delegitimize Jewish death and
suffering of the past," by lumping anti-Semitism with a variety of
other "phobias."
"I don't mind condemning Islamophobia, but you can't compare it with
anti-Semitism - they are two different phenomena," he said.
"It resurrects the Zionism-Racism issue in a way that brings back
the bad old days, suggests that the deep hostility and hatred toward
Israel is an ongoing feature of the international landscape," said
Jess Hordes, director of the ADL's Washington office. "And it really
hijacks a conference that should be devoted to addressing the real
and serious problems of racism and xenophobia."
The US is also opposed to parts of the resolution that would
reinforce claims by African Americans and African nations demanding
reparations from countries that were involved in the slave trade in
the 18th and 19th centuries.
US Secretary of State Colin Powell met last month with UN High
Commissioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson, who will chair the
week-long conference, which opens August 31.
Powell, who has not yet decided whether he will attend, informed
senators at a committee hearing that he told Robinson he is anxious
to see strong US participation in the conference, but some serious
work had to be done to eliminate such issues as a Zionism-is-racism
proposition, or dealing with slavery and compensation and other
matters which would detract from the purpose of the conference.
The dispute is the latest rough spot in US-UN relations. Earlier
this year, the US was voted off a UN human rights body and America
has in the past withheld its payment of UN dues. Diplomatic sources
in Washington say if the resolution passes in its current form,
Congress could move again to deny those payments.
(Herb Keinon contributed to this report.)



























