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U.S. wants thorny issues out of racism meet
By Sridhar Krishnaswami
WASHINGTON, JULY 27. The Bush administration has warned that the
United States will not be in Durban, South Africa, for the
International Conference on Racism if contentious issues are not
sorted out, The Washington Post says, quoting senior
administration officials. The contentious issues relate to
equating Zionism with racism and reparations for slavery and
colonialism.
According to the report, the State Department is planning to
inform some three dozen envoys of the administration's position.
``We need to be really clear about our position. We don't want
anybody to be surprised when they look up on the day of Durban
and wonder why we're not there'', a senior State Department
official said. Foreign envoys will be meeting the Under Secretary
of State for Political Affairs, Mr. Marc Grossman, as also Under
Secretary of State, Ms Paula Dobriansky. Washington has been
displeased at the way the agenda for next month's meeting is
proceeding and has decided to voice its opinion.
Senior officials of the Bush administration like the Secretary of
State, Gen. Colin Powell, and the National Security Advisor, Dr.
Condoleeza Rice, have been in touch with the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights, Ms Mary Robinson, who is the main
organiser of the Durban meet. Next week, the final round of
meetings begin in Geneva for firming up the agenda. The U.S. has
a five-member team from the State Department.
If the Bush administration does stay out of the Durban meeting,
that should not come as a surprise. Nor would it be for the first
time that Washington is keeping away from the mainstream.
Washington faced a lot of criticism recently for refusing to sign
the Kyoto Protocols. The administration has firmly said that the
U.S. will not be a party to anything that is not in its national
interests.
One perception here is that the Durban meeting is going to be
nothing more than a big shouting match with the ensuing media
hoopla. African Americans and some African nations are of the
view that reparations are due from countries that participated in
the slave trade in the 18th and 19th centuries; and some Arab
organisations have been looking at a 1975 United Nations
Resolution that equates Zionism with racism.
The argument has been made in some quarters that given the
frustrations in West Asia and the rising tempers and tensions
there, Arab nations would seek to use the Durban meeting to
condemn Israel and Zionism. ``I think the U.S. should vigorously
protest. If it's going to be a circus, the U.S. should send a
very low level delegation'', Rabbi Marvin Hire of the Simon
Wisenthal Centre of Los Angeles has told The Post. In fact, it is
being said that discussions are already under way within the
administration on the composition of the delegation should the
U.S. decide to go to Durban.
Participating or staying out of the Durban meet is a domestic
problem for the Bush administration as well; and tempers are
really hotting up on Capitol Hill where a Congressional hearing
on the Durban conference was postponed at the last minute on the
ground that a staffer was unable to attend.
``They (the administration) want to prevent black people from
having an opportunity to discuss the World Conference Against
Racism in an official setting'', charged Ms. Cynthia McKinney, a
senior member of the International Operations Sub Committee of
the House of Representatives.
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